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  • 1
    Keywords: Rock deformation ; Geology, Structural ; Rock mechanics ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Gestein ; Deformation ; Deformationsverhalten ; Gefüge ; Rheologie ; Tektonik ; Strukturgeologie ; Deformation ; Kristallgitter ; Anisotropie
    Description / Table of Contents: This collection of papers presents recent advances in the study of deformation mechanisms and rheology and their applications to tectonics. Many of the contributions exploit new petrofabric techniques, particularly electron backscatter diffraction, to help understand evolution of rock microstructure and mechanical properties. Papers in the first section (lattice preferred orientations and anisotropy) show a growing emphasis on the determination of elastic properties from petrofabrics, from which acoustic properties can be computed for comparison with in-situ seismic measurements. Such research will underpin geodynamic interpretation of large-scale active tectonics. Contributions in the second section (microstructures, mechanisms and rheology) study the relations between microstructural evolution during deformation and mechanical properties. Many of the papers explore how different mechanisms compete and interact to control the evolution of grain size and petrofabrics. Contributors make use of combinations of laboratory experiments, field studies and computational methods, and several relate microstructural and mechanical evolution to large-scale tectonic processes observed in nature--
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XI, 342 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9781862393387
    Series Statement: Geological Society special publication 360
    DDC: 551.8
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: Deformation mechanisms, rheology and tectonics: microstructures, mechanics and anisotropy: introduction , Constraints on the seismic properties of the middle and lower continental crust , Mica-controlled anisotropy within mid-to-upper crustal mylonites: an EBSD study of mica fabrics in the Alpine Fault Zone, New Zealand , From crystal to crustal: petrofabric-derived seismic modelling of regional tectonics , Deformation mechanisms of plagioclase and seismic anisotropy of the Acebuches metabasites (SW Iberian massif) , Seismic velocity in antigorite-bearing serpentinite mylonites , Obliteration of olivine crystallographic preferred orientation patterns in subduction-related antigorite-bearing mantle peridotite: an example from the Higashi-Akaishi body, SW Japan , Dissolution precipitation creep versus crystalline plasticity in high-pressure metamorphic serpentinites , Crystal fabric development and slip systems in a quartz mylonite: an approach via transmission electron microscopy and viscoplastic self-consistent modelling , Calculating anisotropic physical properties from texture data using the MTEX open-source package , The microstructural and rheological evolution of shear zones , Torsion experiments on coarse-grained dunite: implications for microstructural evolution when diffusion creep is suppressed , Characterization of microstructures and interpretation of flow mechanisms in naturally deformed, fine-grained anhydrite by means of EBSD analysis , Grain growth and the lifetime of diffusion creep deformation , Microstructures in deforming-reactive systems , Biases in three-diemensional vorticity analysis using porphyroclast system: limits and application to natural examples , Diffusion-creep modelling of fibrous pressure shadows II: influence of inclusion size and interface roughness , Rock mechanics constraints on mid-crustal low-viscosity flow beneath Tibet
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Shao, Yilun; Prior, David J; Scott, James M; Negrini, Marianne (submitted): Pre-Alpine Fault fabrics in mantle xenoliths from East Otago, South Island, New Zealand.
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: Major and minor geochemistry information and measured EBSD (electron backscatter diffraction), accompanied with MTEX toolbox scripts example.
    Keywords: EBSD; Major element; minor element; MTEX script
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 257.8 MBytes
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bons, Paul D; Kleiner, Thomas; Llorens, Maria-Gema; Prior, David J; Sachau, Till; Weikusat, Ilka; Jansen, Daniela (2018): Greenland Ice Sheet: Higher Nonlinearity of Ice Flow Significantly Reduces Estimated Basal Motion. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(13), 6542-6548, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL078356
    Publication Date: 2023-02-06
    Description: In times of warming in polar regions, the prediction of ice sheet discharge is of utmost importance to society, because of its impact on sea level rise. In simulations the flow rate of ice is usually implemented as proportional to the differential stress to the power of the exponent n=3. This exponent influences the softness of the modeled ice, as higher values would produce faster flow under equal stress. We show that the stress exponent, which best fits the observed state of the Greenland Ice Sheet, equals n=4, Our results, which are not dependent on a possible basal sliding component of flow, indicate that most of the interior northern ice sheet is currently frozen to bedrock, except for the large ice streams and marginal ice.
    Keywords: File content; File format; File name; File size; MULT; Multiple investigations; Northern_Greenland_Ice_Sheet; Uniform resource locator/link to file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 75 data points
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  • 4
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    AGU
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, AGU, 125, pp. e2020JF005714, ISSN: 2169-9003
    Publication Date: 2020-11-02
    Description: We present a series of simple shear numerical simulations of dynamic recrystallization of two‐phase non‐linear viscous materials that represent temperate ice. Firstly, we investigate the effect of the presence of water on the resulting microstructures and, secondly, how water influences on P‐wave (Vp) and fast S‐wave (Vs) velocities. Regardless the water percentage, all simulations evolve from a random fabric to a vertical single maximum. For a purely solid aggregate, the highest Vp quickly aligns with the maximum c‐axis orientation. At the same time, the maximum c‐axis development reduces Vs in this orientation. When water is present, the developed maximum c‐axis orientation is less intense, which results in lower Vp and Vs. At high percentage of water, Vp does not align with the maximum c‐axis orientation. If the bulk modulus of ice is assumed for the water phase (i.e., implying that water is at high pressure), we find a remarkable decrease of Vs while Vp remains close to the value for purely solid ice. These results suggest that the decrease in Vs observed at the base of the ice sheets could be explained by the presence of water at elevated pressure, which would reside in isolated pockets at grain triple junctions. Under these conditions water would not favor sliding between ice grains. However, if we consider that deformation dominates over recrystallization water pockets get continuously stretched, allowing water films to be located at grain boundaries. This configuration would modify and even overprint the maximum c‐axis‐dependent orientation and the magnitude of seismic anisotropy.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 5
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    Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics (CIG)
    In:  EPIC3Tectonics Community Science Workshop, virtual, 2020-07-27-2020-07-31University of California, Davis, Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics (CIG)
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: The ice mass balances of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets represent the largest uncertainty for predicting future sea-level rise. Understanding how ice flows from the accumulation to the ablation zone is therefore crucial for correctly estimating the changing mass in polar ice-sheets. On Earth, ice crystals have a hexagonal symmetry (ice lh) with a strong anisotropy favouring basal slip. This results in a progressive development of a vertical c-axis preferred orientation (LPO) of ice polycrystalline aggregates during deformation. In depth, the elastic anisotropy of polycrystalline ice gradually increases due the development of a vertical LPO. Observations of P-wave (Vp) and S-wave (Vs) velocities in ice sheets reveal a strong decrease of ~25% of Vs in depth, while Vp remains approximately constant. According to Wittlinger and Farra (2015) the low Vs may be due to the presence of unfrozen liquids resulting from pre-melting at grain joints and/or melting of chemical solutions buried in ice. Although previous studies of two-phase rocks (including melt and water) show that seismic velocities depend on both LPO and water content, studies on the effect of melt on polar ice seismic velocity are scarce. In this contribution we investigate the changes in P- and faster S-wave velocities during deformation of polycrystalline ice with different melt fractions.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2018-07-30
    Description: In times of warming in polar regions, the prediction of ice sheet discharge is of utmost importance to society, because of its impact on sea level rise. In simulations the flow rate of ice is usually implemented as proportional to the differential stress to the power of the exponent n=3. This exponent influences the softness of the modeled ice, as higher values would produce faster flow under equal stress. We show that the stress exponent, which best fits the observed state of the Greenland Ice Sheet, equals n=4. Our results, which are not dependent on a possible basal sliding component of flow, indicate that most of the interior northern ice sheet is currently frozen to bedrock, except for the large ice streams and marginal ice. Ice in the polar ice sheets flows towards the oceans under its own weight. Knowing how fast the ice flows is of crucial importance to predict future sea level rise. The flow has two components: (1) internal shearing flow of ice and (2) basal motion, which is sliding along the base of ice sheets, especially when the ice melts at this base. To determine the first component we need to know how "soft" the ice is. By considering the flow velocities at the surface of the northern Greenland Ice Sheet and calculating the stresses that cause the flow, we determined that the ice is effectively softer than is usually assumed. Previous studies indicated that the base of the ice is thawed in large parts (up to about 50%) of the Greenland Ice Sheet. Our study shows that that is probably overestimated, because these studies assumed ice to be harder than it actually is. Our new assessment reduces the area with basal motion and thus melting to about 6-13% in the Greenland study area.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2020-02-18
    Description: Grain size reduction due to cataclasis is a key process controlling fault frictional properties during the seismic cycle. We investigated the role of cleavage planes on fracturing and microstructural evolution during cataclasis in wet and dry carbonate fault gouges (50 wt% calcite, 50 wt% dolomite) deformed in a rotary-shear apparatus over a wide range of slip rates (30 μms−1 to 1 ms−1) and displacements (0.05–0.4 m). During shearing, progressive strain localization forms a narrow slip zone that undergoes significant frictional heating (at high slip rates), but the bulk gouge always accommodates low finite shear strains and deforms at low temperatures. Microstructural analysis of the bulk gouges indicates that deformation occurred by brittle fracturing and twinning. Microfractures in calcite are closely spaced, often exploit cleavage r-rhomb planes, and occur mainly subparallel to the expected principal stress orientation (σ1). Instead, twin planes typically occur sub-perpendicular to σ1. Electron backscatter diffraction analysis of the bulk gouges shows that calcite develops a well-defined crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) at all investigated deformation conditions. The CPO is defined by a clustering of the calcite c-axes around an orientation sub-parallel to σ1. The calcite CPO is interpreted to result from grain rotation during granular flow, followed by brittle fracturing that occurred preferentially along calcite cleavage planes. This interpretation is supported by measurements of calcite grain shape-preferred orientations that show a population of elongate calcite grains oriented with their long axes sub-parallel to σ1. Our experimental results indicate that well-defined CPOs can form at low temperature in cataclastic fault rocks, and that mineral cleavage can strongly influence the evolution of grain sizes and shapes during comminution.
    Description: Published
    Description: 37-50
    Description: 3T. Sorgente sismica
    Description: 2IT. Laboratori analitici e sperimentali
    Description: JCR Journal
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2020-02-18
    Description: Nanograins (≪1 μm) are common in the principal slip zones of natural and experimental faults, but their formation and influence on fault mechanical behavior are poorly understood. We performed transmission Kikuchi diffraction (spatial resolution 20–50 nm) on the principal slip zone of an experimental carbonate gouge (50 wt% calcite, 50 wt% dolomite) that was deformed at a maximum slip rate of 1.2 m/s for 0.4 m displacement. The principal slip zone (PSZ) consists of nanogranular aggregates of calcite, Mg‐calcite, dolomite and periclase, dominated by grain sizes in the range of 100–300 nm. Nanograins in the ultrafine (〈 800 nm) PSZ matrix have negligible internal lattice distortion, while grains 〉 800 nm in size contain subgrains. A weak crystallographic preferred orientation is observed as a clustering of calcite c‐axes within the PSZ. The high‐resolution microstructural observations from transmission Kikuchi diffraction, in combination with published flow laws for calcite, are compatible with high‐velocity slip in the PSZ having been accommodated by a combination of grain size sensitive creep in the ultrafine matrix, and grain size insensitive creep in the larger grains, with the former process likely controlling the bulk rheology of the PSZ after dynamic weakening. If the activation energy for creep is lowered by the nanogranular nature of the aggregates, this could facilitate grain size sensitive creep at high (coseismic) strain rates and only moderate bulk temperatures of approximately 600 °C, although temperatures up to 1000 °C could be locally achieved due to processes such as flash heating.
    Description: Published
    Description: 10197-10209
    Description: 3T. Sorgente sismica
    Description: 2IT. Laboratori analitici e sperimentali
    Description: JCR Journal
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-06-15
    Description: Creep due to ice flow is generally thought to be the main cause for the formation of crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs) in polycrystalline anisotropic ice. However, linking the development of CPOs to the ice flow history requires a proper understanding of the ice aggregate's microstructural response to flow transitions. In this contribution the influence of ice deformation history on the CPO development is investigated by means of full-field numerical simulations at the microscale. We simulate the CPO evolution of polycrystalline ice under combinations of two consecutive deformation events up to high strain, using the code VPFFT (visco-plastic fast Fourier transform algorithm) within ELLE. A volume of ice is first deformed under coaxial boundary conditions, which results in a CPO. The sample is then subjected to different boundary conditions (coaxial or non-coaxial) in order to observe how the deformation regime switch impacts the CPO. The model results indicate that the second flow event tends to destroy the first, inherited fabric with a range of transitional fabrics. However, the transition is slow when crystallographic axes are critically oriented with respect to the second imposed regime. Therefore, interpretations of past deformation events from observed CPOs must be carried out with caution, particularly in areas with complex deformation histories.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Fan, S., Hager, T. F., Prior, D. J., Cross, A. J., Goldsby, D. L., Qi, C., Negrini, M., & Wheeler, J. Temperature and strain controls on ice deformation mechanisms: Insights from the microstructures of samples deformed to progressively higher strains at-10,-20 and-30 degrees C. Cryosphere, 14(11), (2020): 3875-3905, doi:10.5194/tc-14-3875-2020.
    Description: In order to better understand ice deformation mechanisms, we document the microstructural evolution of ice with increasing strain. We include data from experiments at relatively low temperatures (−20 and −30 ∘C), where the microstructural evolution with axial strain has never before been documented. Polycrystalline pure water ice was deformed under a constant displacement rate (strain rate ∼1.0×10−5 s−1) to progressively higher strains (∼ 3 %, 5 %, 8 %, 12 % and 20 %) at temperatures of −10, −20 and −30 ∘C. Microstructural data were generated from cryogenic electron backscattered diffraction (cryo-EBSD) analyses. All deformed samples contain subgrain (low-angle misorientations) structures with misorientation axes that lie dominantly in the basal plane, suggesting the activity of dislocation creep (glide primarily on the basal plane), recovery and subgrain rotation. Grain boundaries are lobate in all experiments, suggesting the operation of strain-induced grain boundary migration (GBM). Deformed ice samples are characterized by interlocking big and small grains and are, on average, finer grained than undeformed samples. Misorientation analyses between nearby grains in 2-D EBSD maps are consistent with some 2-D grains being different limbs of the same irregular grain in the 3-D volume. The proportion of repeated (i.e. interconnected) grains is greater in the higher-temperature experiments suggesting that grains have more irregular shapes, probably because GBM is more widespread at higher temperatures. The number of grains per unit area (accounting for multiple occurrences of the same 3-D grain) is higher in deformed samples than undeformed samples, and it increases with strain, suggesting that nucleation is involved in recrystallization. “Core-and-mantle” structures (rings of small grains surrounding big grains) occur in −20 and −30 ∘C experiments, suggesting that subgrain rotation recrystallization is active. At temperatures warmer than −20 ∘C, c axes develop a crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) characterized by a cone (i.e. small circle) around the compression axis. We suggest the c-axis cone forms via the selective growth of grains in easy slip orientations (i.e. ∼ 45∘ to shortening direction) by GBM. The opening angle of the c-axis cone decreases with strain, suggesting strain-induced GBM is balanced by grain rotation. Furthermore, the opening angle of the c-axis cone decreases with temperature. At −30 ∘C, the c-axis CPO changes from a narrow cone to a cluster, parallel to compression, with increasing strain. This closure of the c-axis cone is interpreted as the result of a more active grain rotation together with a less effective GBM. We suggest that lattice rotation, facilitated by intracrystalline dislocation glide on the basal plane, is the dominant mechanism controlling grain rotation. Low-angle neighbour-pair misorientations, relating to subgrain boundaries, are more extensive and extend to higher misorientation angles at lower temperatures and higher strains supporting a relative increase in the importance of dislocation activity. As the temperature decreases, the overall CPO intensity decreases, primarily because the CPO of small grains is weaker. High-angle grain boundaries between small grains have misorientation axes that have distributed crystallographic orientations. This implies that, in contrast to subgrain boundaries, grain boundary misorientation is not controlled by crystallography. Nucleation during recrystallization cannot be explained by subgrain rotation recrystallization alone. Grain boundary sliding of finer grains or a different nucleation mechanism that generates grains with random orientations could explain the weaker CPO of the fine-grained fraction and the lack of crystallographic control on high-angle grain boundaries.
    Description: This research has been supported by the NASA Fund (grant no. NNX15AM69G) and the Marsden Fund of the Royal Society of New Zealand (grant nos. UOO1116, UOO052).
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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