M. Shear Zones

Definition and geometry

Shear zones and faults

Figure 1. Fault, fault zone, shear zone.

Shear zones are zones of intense ductile deformation that are thin relative their lateral extent. Shear zones, like faults, typically show offsets of older structures, but unlike faults, they lack through-going brittle fractures.

In practice, faults and shear zones are closely related. Many major structures that are faults at the Earth’s surface probably connect with ductile shear zones at depth, and in the transition it is common to find composite zones that display combinations of brittle fracture and ductile flow.

At map scale, shear zones can look just like faults, and they display all the same types of geometric relationships (offset, separation, throw, heave, etc.). We will not repeat those definitions in this section.

At outcrop and microscopic scale, though, ductile shear zones are characterized by planar and linear fabrics. Grain-size reduction is also common. When it was originally described, the metamorphic rock-type produced by this grain-size reduction was thought to be a product of brittle grinding (cataclasis) and the rock was named mylonite from a Greek word for milling flour. We now know better – the fine grain-size is the product of dynamic recrystallization – the breakdown of the original mineral grains, and growth of new, resulting from the accumulation of defects that result from extreme plastic deformation.

Shear zone kinematics

Where the kinematics of shear zones can be determined, most show a large component of rotational deformation and many turn out to have undergone progressive simple shear. However, the strain is often heterogeneous, and different parts of the shear zone show different parts of the strain history, a phenomenon known as strain partitioning.

Figure 2. Incremental and cumulative strain in a homogeneous simple shear zone.

The typical geometry of a shear zone is therefore a band of heterogeneous simple shear, across which previous structures are offset.

The overall strain inside a zone of ideal simple shear varies. The incremental strain typically shows strain axes at about 45° to the shear zone boundary, but the finite strain shows the effects of rotation: with increasing deformation the shape of the strain ellipse becomes more and more extreme and the extension direction (X or S1) rotates closer and closer to the shear zone boundary. Although the extension direction never quite becomes parallel to the shear zone boundary, in cases of extreme deformation, the difference in direction may be almost imperceptible.

Figure 3. Simulation of heterogeneous simple shear applied to a grid of markers. Fabric produced as strain becomes more intense as it curves toward the centre of the shear zone.

Fabrics

Simple sigmoidal foliation patterns

The most basic pattern of foliation in a shear zone is known as sigmoidal oblique foliation. This is the fabric that is produced by the flattening of particles or domains (clasts, mineral grains, etc.)in the protolith (the original rock), when heterogeneous simple shear takes place.

In the least deformed, marginal parts of the shear zone, the foliation is weak, and oriented at around 45° to the shear zone. Towards the centre of the shear zone the foliation intensifies with increasing strain, and it curves so that it is near-parallel to the overall shear zone. The sense of rotation of the foliation with increasing strain (whether clockwise or counter-clockwise) shows the sense of shear on the zone.

Lineations

Associated with sigmoidal foliation, the stretched particles of the protolith typically are extended and define a stretching lineation which gives a streaky appearance to the foliation surface. The orientation of this lineation, when visible, and its rake in the foliation surface, are important quantities to measure in the field description of a shear zone.

C-S fabrics

Figure 4. C-S fabric.

In some shear zones, strain is obviously partitioned such that zones of intense shear, and grain size reduction, alternate with zones of less intense strain, where the foliation is more oblique and the grain size is coarser. This configuration is called C-S foliation (sometimes S-C). The C-planes (where ‘C’ stands for “cisaillement” in French, meaning shearing) are the surfaces that are closer to the shear zone boundary and represent the most deformed bands. The S-planes (for “schistosité”) represent the less-deformed zones and may be oriented up to 45° from the C-planes and the shear zone boundary. The sense of rotation from S to C shows the sense of shear on the overall shear zone.

 

Shear bands

Figure 5. Diagram of shear-band foliation.

Shear band foliations are geometrically very similar to C-S foliations. They form later in the history of a shear zone, typically after a strong foliation has been developed throughout. Shear bands take the form of a new set of smaller shear zones that offset the original foliation. In a dextral shear zone they are clockwise from the original C-planes; in a sinistral shear zone the orientation is counter-clockwise. Shear bands are also known by the names “extensional crenulation cleavage” andC-prime (C') foliation.

 

Mineral structure of shear zones

It’s possible to learn what goes on in mylonite formation by looking at microscopic thin sections from shear zones. In this type of work it’s important to collect oriented rock samples. Typically this is done by marking a strike and dip symbol on a surface of the rock, before the sample is removed with a hammer. Any surface can be marked: a foliation surface or an arbitrary weathering surface. It’s important to note whether the marked surface is a top surface or an overhanging surface. As an additional check it’s useful to flag the right-hand-rule strike direction with an arrow. On a top surface, the dip direction will be clockwise from the RHR strike direction; on an overhanging surface, looking up, the dip direction will appear counter-clockwise from the RHR strike direction.

Undulose (undulatory) extinction

Figure 6. Undulose extinction and mortar structure, sheared quartz vein, Cape Chignecto, Nova Scotia. In this view, polarizing plates are above and below the microscope stage (cross polars) so that the orientation of quartz crystals can be distinguished in different shades of grey. In this example, dynamic recrystallization has started to occur at grain boundaries, but the grain cores show strongly undulose extinction when viewed between crossed polars. Field of view is approximately 1 cm.

On approaching a shear zone, the first thing that is noted is an increase in the intensity of undulose (undulatory) extinction when the thin section is viewed between crossed polars. This is caused by an accumulation of defects (dislocations) in the crystal lattice.

 

Mortar structure

With increasing deformation, new tiny crystals appear along the grain boundaries. These are believed to form because the accumulation of dislocations makes the original crystal unstable, so solid-state recrystallization occurs producing new undeformed crystal lattices. This process is called dynamic recrystallization.

Eventually the recrystallized material surrounds the original crystals, producing what is known as mortar structure (because it looks like bricks and mortar) or core and mantle structure.

Mylonitic rocks

Figure 7. Mylonite, Cape Chignecto, Nova Scotia. In the central part of the slide, the original quartz grains have been reduced to fine-grained mylonite. Field of view is approximately 0.3 cm.

Rocks which contain significant amounts of dynamically crystallized fine-grained material are mylonitic. Mylonitic rocks are classified based on the proportion of this fine-grained material relative to remaining fragments of the original rock, known as porphyroclasts. (Don’t confuse porphyroclasts and porphyroblasts. Porphyroclasts are large grains in a metamorphic rock that are left over when the rest of the rock has had its grain size reduced by dynamic recrystallization. Porphyroblasts are large grains in a metamorphic rock that have grown in a fine-grained matrix, typically as a result of high temperature.)

  • Protomylonite

If the porphyroclasts still make up more than 50% of the rock, then the rock is called a protomylonite.

  • Mylonite
Figure 8. Mylonite with porphyroclasts, British Columbia.

True mylonite has from 50% to 10% porphyroclasts.

  • Ultramylonite

A rock which is almost entirely dynamically recrystallized, such that there are less than 10% porphyroclasts remaining, is an ultramylonite.

Matrix – porphyroclast relations

Figure 9. Sigma and delta structures.

Because they are less deformed than the surrounding material, porphyroclasts represent sites of strain partitioning, and sometimes give away the sense of shear in a mylonite. There are two distinctive styles.

  • Sigma structure

The foliation sweeps around a sigma porphyroclast in a somewhat rhombic shape, rather like a “small island of S-plane” in a sea of C-plane. Just like C-S fabric it can therefore indicate sense of shear. It is named after the shape of the Greek lowercase letter sigma: σ.

  • Delta structure

If the porphyroclast is affected more by the rotation component of deformation, it, together with the foliation in the adjoining matrix, may be rolled together into a delta porphyroclast named for the Greek letter delta: δ.

Folds in shear zones

Figure 10. Development of folds in shear zones. In (a), an asymmetric fold is developed, which tightens in (b). In (c), a second asymmetric fold re-folds the first. Alternatively, in (d) the asymmetric fold develops a strongly curved hinge, becoming a sheath fold.

Asymmetric folds

Folds in shear zones tend to form as small irregularities in the foliation are amplified by extreme strains. At first, newly developed folds show clear S or Z asymmetry, depending on whether the sense of rotation in the shear zone is counter-clockwise or clockwise from the point of view of the observer of the folds. However, the high strain typical of a well developed shear zone means that folds may easily become isoclinal, and the limbs are transposed parallel to the overall foliation, at which point the original asymmetry may be difficult to follow.

Refolded folds

Folds in shear zones tend to form as small irregularities in the foliation are amplified by extreme strains. At first, newly developed folds show clear S or Z asymmetry, depending on whether the sense of rotation in the shear zone is counter-clockwise or clockwise from the point of view of the observer of the folds. However, the high strain typical of a well developed shear zone means that folds may easily become isoclinal, and the limbs are transposed parallel to the overall foliation, at which point the original asymmetry may be difficult to follow.

Sheath folds

As folds in shear zones tighten, small irregularities on their hinges are also amplified, with the result that fold hinges may become strongly curved into geometries that resemble the finger of a glove. These are known as sheath folds, and are characteristic of highly noncoaxial deformation.

Figure 11. Sheath fold in mylonitic limestone. Old Man’s Pond, Newfoundland.
definition

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Geological Structures: a Practical Introduction Copyright © 2020 by John Waldron and Morgan Snyder is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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