TY - JOUR
T1 - Deformation conditions and kinematics of fault rocks in the Hatagawa Fault Zone and the Shajigami Shear Zone, Northeast Japan
T2 - Insights from calcite and quartz microstructures
AU - Watanuki, Shunsuke
AU - Hisada, Tsukasa
AU - Onoda, Jun
AU - Hisasue, Shuya
AU - Kanai, Takuto
AU - Takagi, Hideo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/8
Y1 - 2020/8
N2 - Calcite grains are plastically deformed at lower temperatures than are quartz grains, which means that investigating the microstructures of both minerals should provide useful information regarding the deformation history of faults. We investigated the conditions of deformation and kinematics of fault rocks within the Hatagawa Fault Zone and the Shajigami Shear Zone, Northeast Japan, using deformation microstructures and crystallographic preferred orientations of quartz and calcite. The Hatagawa Fault Zone trends NNW–SSE, and the associated foliated granite cataclasites show sinistral shear. Limestone mylonite samples showing sinistral shearing display girdles of calcite c-axes close to the YZ plane and Z-maximum, suggesting relatively high and low temperatures of deformation, respectively. The Shajigami Shear Zone trends NE–SW, and quartz microstructures in granodiorite mylonites of the shear zone indicate dislocation creep at temperatures of 400–500 °C. The limestone mylonites have Z-maximum patterns of calcite c-axes. These fault rocks were deformed during the Cretaceous (before the Cenozoic 40° counterclockwise rotation of Northeast Japan) in a kinematic framework characterized by a shortening direction that rotated from N–S to NW–SE. The kinematics and deformation ages of the fault rocks correspond to a change in the direction of motion of the Izanagi Plate at c. 100 Ma.
AB - Calcite grains are plastically deformed at lower temperatures than are quartz grains, which means that investigating the microstructures of both minerals should provide useful information regarding the deformation history of faults. We investigated the conditions of deformation and kinematics of fault rocks within the Hatagawa Fault Zone and the Shajigami Shear Zone, Northeast Japan, using deformation microstructures and crystallographic preferred orientations of quartz and calcite. The Hatagawa Fault Zone trends NNW–SSE, and the associated foliated granite cataclasites show sinistral shear. Limestone mylonite samples showing sinistral shearing display girdles of calcite c-axes close to the YZ plane and Z-maximum, suggesting relatively high and low temperatures of deformation, respectively. The Shajigami Shear Zone trends NE–SW, and quartz microstructures in granodiorite mylonites of the shear zone indicate dislocation creep at temperatures of 400–500 °C. The limestone mylonites have Z-maximum patterns of calcite c-axes. These fault rocks were deformed during the Cretaceous (before the Cenozoic 40° counterclockwise rotation of Northeast Japan) in a kinematic framework characterized by a shortening direction that rotated from N–S to NW–SE. The kinematics and deformation ages of the fault rocks correspond to a change in the direction of motion of the Izanagi Plate at c. 100 Ma.
KW - Crystallographic preferred orientation
KW - Foliated cataclasite
KW - Hatagawa fault zone
KW - Kinematics
KW - Mylonite
KW - Shajigami shear zone
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jsg.2020.104046
DO - 10.1016/j.jsg.2020.104046
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85084404293
SN - 0191-8141
VL - 137
JO - Journal of Structural Geology
JF - Journal of Structural Geology
M1 - 104046
ER -