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Transcrystalline shear fracturing and pseudotachylite generation in a meta-anorthosite (Harris, Scotland)
Authors:Jean Macaudi  re,William L. Brown
Affiliation:Laboratoire de Pétrologie, ENSG, BP 452, 54001 Nancy Cédex, France;Laboratoire de Pétrologie-Géochimie, Université Nancy I, Faculté des Sciences, Boîte Postale 239, 54506 Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy Cédex, France
Abstract:The meta-anorthosite is locally deformed by brittle shear fracturing, which progressively increases from isolated fractures with little cataclasite to many generations of closely spaced fractures, the intervening rock being highly deformed, in both a plastic and brittle way. In most cases an E-W compression on gently dipping to steep reverse shear planes occurs, which we relate to a Caledonian thrust zone.In places, the highly deformed rock is cut by pseudotachylite veins, which locally form networks. The pseudotachylite is generally intrusive, but does not appear to be related to movement on major slip surfaces. Very locally it may have formed in situ. Pseudotachylite only occurs in highly deformed rock, is only very occasionally deformed itself and, thus, generally represents at each locality the last stage of a complex deformation history, as if its presence welded the rock and prevented further deformation. These striking differences from the country-rock gneisses (in which pseudotachylite occurs on well developed fractures in very slightly deformed rock) are considered to be due to the low anisotropy of the meta-anorthosite, to its lower shear strength and to the easy propagation and branching of the shear fractures in plagioclase. The source of the heat necessary to generate the pseudotachylite melt is not clear—it may come from crack propagation as well as frictional sliding.
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