Spatial correlation of deformation and mineral reaction in experimentally deformed plagioclase-olivine aggregates

AA de Ronde, R Heilbronner, H Stünitz, J Tullis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Shear deformation of hot pressed plagioclase–olivine aggregates was studied in the presence and absence of mineral reaction. Experiments were performed at 900 °C, 1500 MPa, and a constant shear strain rate of not, vert, similar5×10-5 s-1 in a solid medium apparatus. Whether the mineral reaction between plagioclase and olivine takes place or not is controlled by choosing the appropriate plagioclase composition; labradorite (An60) does not react, anorthite (An92) does. Labradorite–olivine aggregates deformed without reaction are very strong and show strain hardening throughout the experiment. Syndeformational reaction between olivine and anorthite causes a pronounced strain weakening. The reaction produces fine-grained opx–cpx–spinel aggregates, which accommodate a large fraction of the finite strain. Deformation and reaction are localised within a 0.5-mm-wide sample. Three representative samples were analysed for their fabric anisotropy R* and shape-preferred orientation a* (fabric angle with the shear plane) using the autocorrelation function (ACF). Fabric anisotropy can be calibrated to quantify strain variations across the sheared samples. In the deformed and reacted anorthite–olivine aggregate, there is a strong correlation between reaction progress and strain; regions of large shear strain correspond to regions of maximum reaction progress. Within the sample, the derived strain rate variations range up to almost one order of magnitude.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)93-109
Number of pages17
JournalTectonophysics
Volume389
Issue number1-2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Sept 2004
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Autocorrelation function
  • Olivine
  • Plagioclase
  • Reaction weakening
  • Strain localisation and partitioning

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