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Orientation,composition, and entrapment conditions of fluid inclusions in the footwall of the northern Snake Range detachment,Nevada
Institution:1. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N2, Canada;2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208-3130, USA;3. Centre de recherche GEOTOP, Université du Québec à Montréal, CP 8888, succ. Centre-Ville, Montréal, Québec H3C 3P8, Canada;4. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Minnesota, 310 Pillsbury Drive SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455-0231, USA;5. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 845 W. Taylor St., Chicago, IL 60607-7059, USA;6. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899, USA;1. Department of Physics, Chungbuk National University, Cheongju, Republic of Korea;2. Faculty of Physics, VNU University of Science, Vietnam;3. Department of Physics, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Republic of Korea
Abstract:Footwall rocks of the northern Snake Range detachment fault (Hampton and Hendry's Creeks) offer exposures of quartzite mylonites (sub-horizontal foliation) that were permeated by surface fluids. An S–C–C′ mylonitic fabric is defined by dynamically recrystallized quartz and mica. Electron backscatter diffraction analyses indicate a strong preferred orientation of quartz that is overprinted by two sets of sub-vertical, ESE and NNE striking fractures. Analyses of sets of three perpendicular thin sections indicate that fluid inclusions (FIs) are arranged according to macroscopic fracture patterns. FIs associated with NNE and ESE-striking fractures coevally trapped unmixed CO2 and H2O-rich fluids at conditions near the critical CO2–H2O solvus, giving minimum trapping conditions of T = 175–200 °C and ~100 MPa H2O-rich FIs trapped along ESE-trending microcracks in single crystals of quartz may have been trapped at conditions as low as 150 °C and 50 MPa indicating the latest microfracturing and annealing of quartz in an overall extensional system. Results suggest that the upper crust was thin (4–8 km) during FI trapping and had an elevated geotherm (>50 °C/km). Footwall rocks that have been exhumed through the brittle-ductile transition in such extensional systems experience both brittle and crystal-plastic deformation that may allow for circulation of meteoric fluids and grain-scale fluid–rock interactions.
Keywords:Core complex  Brittle-ductile transition  Fluid inclusions  Microstructure  Snake Range
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