Structure and topology of a brittle-ductile fault swarm at Crawford Knob, Franz Josef, New Zealand

NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS(2023)

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摘要
We present surface and structural models of a swarm of dm-scale subparallel faults exposed in a similar to 2000 m(2) glaciated outcrop near Franz Josef Glacier, in the Southern Alps of New Zealand. These structures are inferred to have slipped at similar to 20 km depth in the hanging-wall Alpine Schist of the Alpine Fault under conditions that were variably brittle to ductile as the Pacific Plate was tilted and uplifted. Using field mapping, real-time kinematic GPS and digital images from a remotely piloted aircraft system, we have created a digital surface model of the outcrop and orthophotographs at a ground resolution of similar to 1 cm to map compositional layering in the metasediments and the array of brittle-ductile faults displacing them. In order of decreasing relative age (and average thickness), displaced markers in the schist include primary psammite and pelite beds, quartz veins, and a deformational foliation. The surface models have been used to create 2-D transects and a 3-D model where faults are projected down-dip, to determine the connectivity, topology and intersection types of the fault swarm. Lithological variations, particularly the interface between pelitic and psammitic schist, were a primary control on the topology of the fault network and the spacing between faults.
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关键词
fault,new zealand,brittle-ductile
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