ABSTRACT
Petrographic study has been carried out on slickenside thin
sections, to find out reliable microstructures for determining the
slip-sense of faults, and to classify slickensides
morphologically. Thin sections are made cut parallel to the
striation and perpendicular to the slip plane. Many useful
slip-sense indicators are found in thin section even though such
indicators may be absent in hand specimens. They are (1) off-set
or bending of once-continuous bodies such as veins, layers, grains
or twin lamellae, (2) crystal fibers growing nearly parallel to
the slip direction, (3) extensional fractures aligned oblique to
the slip plane, (4) S-C geometries in ductile materials, and (5)
Riedel- and P- shear fractures associated with the main slip
surface.
Two distinct layers may exist adjacent to the slickenside surface.
One is termed coating: a discrete layer of material immediately
under the slip surface. The other is termed the deformed host
layer which is a zone of deformation in the host rock developed
parallel to the slickenside. Slickensides are classified into four
morphological types depending on the presence or absence of
coating and deformed host layers. They are type A (deformed host
layer only), type B (coating and deformed host layer), type C (no
coating and no deformed host layer), and type D (coating only).
This morphological classification can be a first step toward
further genetic interpretation of slickensides, which could
eventually be used to infer conditions of faulting. Possible
development paths of each slickenside type indicate that present
slickenside morphology can be influenced by rock type, slip-rate
and depth of faulting during slip and by weathering and
precipitation of veins along the pre-existing slip surface after
slip. Although this classification is not yet fully satisfactory,
it can perhaps be extended and improved by further systematic
slickenside studies.
Lee, Y-J., 1991. Slickenside petrography: slip-sense indicators
and classification.
Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany.
100 pp., +x
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QE 40 Z899 1991 L44
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