摘要

Gabbro- and peridotite-hosted pseudotachylytes from the Alpine Schistes Lustres Unit in Corsica, previously determined to have formed at blueschist to lawsonite-eclogite facies conditions, have been causally linked to the generation of intermediate-depth earthquakes, which occur at depths of 50-300 km. Detailed petrographic and microtextural analyses of these pseudotachylytes suggest that their initiation may be controlled by a thermally-activated shear runaway process that is controlled by rheology rather than mineralogy. This is documented by sheared out, prolate, kinked and twinned wallrock clasts that have been peeled off and entrained into the pseudotachylyte vein as sigmoid survivor clasts. The presence of metastable high temperature crystallisation products in the pseudotachylyte, such as hoppers and dendrites of olivine, enstatite and diopside (peridotite) and Al-rich omphacite and Fe-rich anorthite in metagabbro, are suggestive of a short-lived high-temperature event resulting from thermal instability. These high temperature mineral assemblages are overprinted by ones indicating a return to ambient conditions of lower temperatures, but still high pressures: glaucophane, albite and epidote in metagabbro and clinochlore; and fine-grained granoblastic olivine, enstatite and diopside in peridotite. The observations from this detailed study of natural samples suggest that intermediate-depth seismicity may be generated by a thermal runaway process.

  • 出版日期2014-1-6