Karin Hofer-Apostolidis , José Cembrano , John Browning , Pamela Pérez-Flores , Thomas M. Mitchell , Philip G. Meredith , Flavia Rojas , Tao Xu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Understanding how fluids flow to form halo-bearing veins is essential to assess the fundamental processes involved in fracture propagation and the formation of hydrothermal ore deposits. Haloes may mimic damage zones during fracture propagation, contributing to the identification of scaling relations between halo width and fracture displacement. In this work, we examine geometry, kinematics and mineral composition of well-exposed halo-bearing fault-vein network field samples. We studied a total of 18 veins from Iron-Oxide Copper Gold (IOCG) deposits in the Chilean Atacama Desert and from the Chinese Cathaysia tectonic block. Vein length and width and halo width were measured directly at the outcrop and later under optical microscope. We established a scaling relation, over five orders of magnitude, between halo width (HW) and vein width (VW) of the form which suggests that the majority of analyzed haloes were formed as a result of crack tip process zone damage. Such ratios and scaling relationships, apart from elucidating the physical mechanisms driving halo/damage zone formation, have potential implications for a more reliable estimation of the nature and size of ore grade variations away from high-grade mineralized veins to the relatively lower-grade surrounding wall rock volumes.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Structural Geology publishes process-oriented investigations about structural geology using appropriate combinations of analog and digital field data, seismic reflection data, satellite-derived data, geometric analysis, kinematic analysis, laboratory experiments, computer visualizations, and analogue or numerical modelling on all scales. Contributions are encouraged to draw perspectives from rheology, rock mechanics, geophysics,metamorphism, sedimentology, petroleum geology, economic geology, geodynamics, planetary geology, tectonics and neotectonics to provide a more powerful understanding of deformation processes and systems. Given the visual nature of the discipline, supplementary materials that portray the data and analysis in 3-D or quasi 3-D manners, including the use of videos, and/or graphical abstracts can significantly strengthen the impact of contributions.