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Alteration and mass transfer inferred from the Hirabayashi GSJ drill penetrating the Nojima Fault, Japan
Author(s) -
Fujimoto Koichiro,
Tanaka Hidemi,
Higuchi Takayuki,
Tomida Naoto,
Ohtani Tomoyuki,
Ito Hisao
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
island arc
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.554
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1440-1738
pISSN - 1038-4871
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1738.2001.00338.x
Subject(s) - geology , cataclastic rock , fault (geology) , biotite , protolith , fault gouge , shear zone , geochemistry , carbonate , mylonite , weathering , mineralogy , petrology , metamorphic rock , seismology , chemistry , quartz , paleontology , organic chemistry , tectonics
Mineralogical and geochemical studies on the fault rocks from the Nojima–Hirabayashi borehole, south‐west Japan, are performed to clarify the alteration and mass transfer in the Nojima Fault Zone at shallow depths. A complete sequence from the hornblende–biotite granodiorite protolith to the fault core can be observed without serious disorganization by surface weathering. The parts deeper than 426.2 m are in the fault zone where rocks have suffered fault‐related deformation and alteration. Characteristic alteration minerals in the fault zone are smectite, zeolites (laumontite, stilbite), and carbonate minerals (calcite and siderite). It is inferred that laumontite veins formed at temperatures higher than approximately 100°C during the fault activity. A reverse component in the movement of the Nojima Fault influences the distribution of zeolites. Zeolite is the main sealing mineral in relatively deep parts, whereas carbonate is the main sealing mineral at shallower depths. Several shear zones are recognized in the fault zone. Intense alteration is localized in the gouge zones. Rock chemistry changes in a different manner between different shear zones in the fault zone. The main shear zone (MSZ), which corresponds to the core of the Nojima Fault, shows increased concentration of most elements except Si, Al, Na, and K. However, a lower shear zone (LSZ‐2), which is characterized by intense alteration rather than cataclastic deformation, shows a decreased concentration of most elements including Ti and Zr. A simple volume change analysis based on Ti and Zr immobility, commonly used to examine the changes in fault rock chemistry, cannot account fully for the different behaviors of Ti and Zr among the two gouge zones.