Walkeretal Geology
Walkeretal Geology
Walkeretal Geology
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GSA Data Repository item 2013014, Appendix DR1 (location maps for the study fault zones, Faroe Islands, North Atlantic European continental margin) and
Appendix DR2 (experimental method description, including table of results and graphs for all data), is available online at www.geosociety.org/pubs/ft2013.htm, or on
request from [email protected] or Documents Secretary, GSA, P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301, USA.
GEOLOGY, January 2013; v. 41; no. 1; p. 1–4; Data Repository item 2013014 | doi:10.1130/G33508.1 | Published online XX Month 2012
GEOLOGY | January
© 2012 Geological 2013
Society | www.gsapubs.org
of America. For permission to copy, contact Copyright Permissions, GSA, or [email protected]. 1
Geology, published online on 19 October 2012 as doi:10.1130/G33508.1
tion, low-strain zones can act as barriers to fluid ervoir pressures (0.3–3.0 km) using the tran- anisotropy ratio (kp/kN) at 90 MPa effective pres-
flow whereas high-strain zones act as conduits. sient pulse decay (TPD) technique (Brace et al., sure ranges from 11 to 43, with the maximum
1968); a detailed methodology is provided by anisotropy in the lower-strain zone.
FAULT ZONE ARCHITECTURE Armitage et al. (2011). Argon was used as the The studied basaltic host rocks are generally
Faults in the Faroe Islands cut volcanic and permeant, and all experiments were conducted at low permeability, within the range of 10−20 to
volcaniclastic strata of the Paleocene-age Faroe a maintained room temperature of ~22 °C. The 10−18 m2, with the exception of the compound
Islands Basalt Group (59–56 Ma; Passey and resolution of the pressure measurements is ± 0.3 lava unit sample (L01; Fig. 2). The two sample
Jolley, 2009), and are representative of faulting MPa, and permeability can be measured accu- suites (aphyric basalt lava unit and aphyric to pla-
at depths between 1 and 3 km that developed rately within a range of 10−16 to 10−23 m2 using gioclase-phyric basalt dike) show a varied evolu-
before, during, and immediately after North our setup for the TPD technique. tion pathway from host rock to evolved fault rock
Atlantic break-up in the early Eocene (Walker et (Fig. 2). In the lava sample suite, permeability ini-
al., 2011a). Basaltic host units display joints and STATIC PERMEABILITY RESULTS tially increases by about two orders of magnitude
microfractures formed during cooling, which The bulk permeability structure of a fault (from host to crackle breccia), but then decreases
range in length from <1 mm up to ~30 m (i.e., zone is a composite of the properties of the by a comparable amount into the higher-strain
the thickness of the host unit). Fractures and architectural elements and their spatial arrange- mosaic breccias. By contrast, the dike sample
joints of this type increase in density toward the ment in three dimensions (e.g., Caine and For- suite shows an initial decrease in permeability
top of lava units and toward the margins of dikes. ster, 1999). Permeability measurements of the from host rock to low-strain fault rocks, fol-
Fault-related damage represents an increase in key fault zone components provide an indica- lowed by a near-reciprocal increase toward the
fracture density relative to the host lithology. Slip tion of in situ permeability. On the assumption fault core. That permeability increase continues
is accommodated on a surface or zone of catacla- that low-strain fault rock components represent in the dike suite into the fault core chaotic brec-
site or gouge, defining the principal slip surface early stages of high-strain zones, these data can cia, which records the highest permeabilities of
or zone (PSS or PSZ, respectively; Figs. 1A and be used to infer the evolution of static perme- this study (Fig. 2). A permeability increase is
1D). These are contained within the fault core, ability through time. also recorded from the lava unit mosaic breccia
which is defined here as the zone that accommo- Pressure cycling within the study range (i.e., (IB07) into the PSS cataclasite samples (IB13)
dates the majority of shear displacement and can 10–90 MPa effective pressure) was used here (Fig. 2). Overall the sample suites show lower
be characterized by mosaic and chaotic breccias to close any stress-relief microfractures (see permeability in low-strain zones, and higher per-
(Figs. 1A and 1C) (breccia definitions following Appendix DR2 for details). Our data reveal meability in high-strain zones.
Woodcock et al., 2006). Surrounding the fault that at a simulated reservoir depth of ~3 km (90
core is a zone of damage, which is characterized MPa), permeability spans more than four orders FAULT ROCK ASSEMBLAGES
by crackle to mosaic breccias (Figs. 1A and 1B). of magnitude, ranging from 1.3 × 10−20 m2 (L03; Microstructural characterization of the host-
Calcite and zeolite mineralization are ubiqui- Fig. 2) to 1.4 × 10−16 m2 (L05; Fig. 2). For sam- and fault-rock assemblages is important because
tous in syn-magmatic Faroe Islands fault zones, ples with fault-parallel (kp) and fault-normal it gives insight into the controls on the static
indicating that they acted as conduits for the data (kN), kN ranges from 1.5 × 10−20 m2 (IB07b; permeability laboratory measurements. Fur-
passage of hydrous fluids. Early-formed veins Fig. 2) to 2.8 × 10−18 m2 (IB13b; Fig. 2), and kp thermore it gives a qualitative indication of the
are filled with zeolite that grows inwards from ranges from 6.5 × 10−19 m2 (IB07a; Fig. 2) to likely evolution in synfaulting dynamic perme-
the fracture walls as hemiradial fibers, indicat- 3.0 × 10−17 m2 (IB13a; Fig. 2). The permeability ability with increasing deformation.
ing mineral growth into fluid-filled cavities. In
thicker veins (>1–2 mm thick), calcite is the
dominant mineral fill. In most fault zones, zeo- 10-14 Host Peripheral damage Fault core
lites are also observed lining the euhedral ter-
Effective pressure (MPa)
minations of individual calcite crystals. Textural 10-15 10 30 50 70 90
relationships suggest that zeolite and calcite IB13a basalt
L01 (kP )
mineralization were accompanied by the gen- 10-16 L05 cong.
Sample suite host rocks are generally fine a cataclasite matrix formed of the same compo- sis, and vein dissection. The presence of perva-
crystalline basalt dominated by plagioclase nents. Established vein networks are cut by, and sive mineral vein networks and authigenic clays
and pyroxene, and display very minor mineral incorporated into, the cataclasites. within fault zones also indicates significant
alteration to clays (Fig. 3A). This clay develop- Thin sections of measured samples show a transient permeability development during rock
ment appears to be authigenic, occurring along strong correlation between clay development, fracture episodes (i.e., dynamic permeability).
microfractures and crystal boundaries. Longer section-plane vein connectivity, and static per- Although the host rocks from the sample suites
and wider fractures, where present, are clay- meability results. Where low-strain fault rocks are low-porosity fine crystalline basalts, micro-
lined, and no zeolite or calcite mineralization display connected zeolite veins, permeability is fractures related to cooling and/or distributed
is observed (Fig. 3A). higher than for samples with segmented veins. strain demonstrably facilitated transient low fluid-
Low-strain (<1 m displacement) fault rocks In the most permeable, high-strain zones, clays flux, as evidenced by the occurrence of authi-
(Fig. 3B) show increased alteration relative to are absent or dissected by zeolite and/or calcite genic clays. Depending on fluid chemistry (i.e.,
the host, with discrete zones of clay minerals (veins or continuous clasts of veins). CO2 concentration), pH, and temperature, altera-
developed immediately adjacent to, and parallel tion of the basaltic mineralogy to clays within the
with, fractures and veins (Fig. 3B). In samples IMPLICATIONS FOR PERMEABILITY study depth range (i.e., 0–3 km) can occur in a
L03 and IB07, zeolite veins are clay-lined and STRUCTURE EVOLUTION matter of years (Gysi and Stefánsson, 2008), i.e.,
poorly connected in the section plane, whereas The measured experimental static permeabil- at a rate comparable to aseismic fault creep. Dur-
in samples S02 and L04, zeolite veins are inter- ities, when combined with field and microstruc- ing initial meso- to macro-scale rock fracturing,
connected. Blue-stained zeolite veins in thin tural characterization of the fault rocks, show fluid flow is increased locally, leading to the pre-
section (Figs. 3B and 3C) indicate that these that shallow faults in basalt generally develop cipitation of zeolite and calcite as veins. In these
veins maintain porosity. through stages of low-strain, lower-permeability low-strain (<1 m displacement) fault rocks, veins
High-strain (fault core) rocks that have accom- assemblages to high-strain, higher-permeability and fractures may remain locally statically per-
modated meter-scale or greater displacements assemblages. This contrasts with most clastic- meable, but are lined by low-permeability clays
(Fig. 3C) show intense zeolite and calcite veining or crystalline-hosted fault zone models, where and are poorly interconnected (Fig. 3B). The
that forms a connected network. Authigenic clays high-strain fault cores are generally thought to development of clays acts to decrease permeabil-
developed during host alteration appear to be exhibit lower permeabilities due to grain com- ity relative to the host rocks (Figs. 3A, 3B, and 4).
absent in the crystalline groundmass, with zeo- minution effects (e.g., Caine et al., 1996; Evans Such lowered permeabilities could help promote
lites taking their place. PSS cataclasite samples et al., 1997). Microstructural evidence here indi- pore fluid trapping, ultimately resulting in pres-
that have accommodated ~30 m displacement cates that static permeability evolution in basalt- sure elevation and hydrofracture.
(Fig. 3D) comprise chaotic, generally matrix- hosted faults relates to the interplay between As fault displacement accumulates, zeolite
supported basalt, zeolite, and calcite clasts set in clay sealing, zeolite vein connectivity, catacla- and calcite veins link to form throughgoing,
A: host (no disp.) B: peripheral damage (< 1 m disp.) C: fault core (> 1 m disp.) D: mature fault core (>10 m disp.)
clay development clay replacement clay fabric re-development
0.5 mm 0.5 mm 0.5 mm 0.25 mm 0.5 mm
calcite
clay fabric clay fabric
groundmass
porous
zeolite clay fabric
fill
clay fabric
clay fabric
zeolite
calcite
calcite
porous
zeolite
calcite fill zeolite
Figure 3. Plane-polarized light photomicrographs of host- and fault-rock assemblages used for experimental permeability measurement
(Fig. 2). Samples were prepared using blue-stained resin to show porosity. See text for description and discussion. A: Host rocks. B: Crackle
(left) and mosaic (right) breccias. C: Fault core chaotic breccia. D: Principal slip zone comprising chaotic breccia and cataclasite and/or
gouge. disp.—displacement.