Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or...

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Brittle Deformation

Transcript of Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or...

Page 1: Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on fractures Fracture: A discontinuity across.

Brittle Deformation

Page 2: Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on fractures Fracture: A discontinuity across.

Cracks are useful

Page 3: Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on fractures Fracture: A discontinuity across.

Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on

fractures

Fracture: A discontinuity across which cohesion is lost

The term fracture includes three basic types of discontinuities: Joint Shear fracture Hybrid shear fracture

Vein: fracture filled by secondary minerals

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Faults and joints

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Joint sets

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Devils tower

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Systems of joints and shear fractures:

Structural Domains are regions with similar joint styles and orientations. They are usually designated on the basis of geographic boundaries, lithologies, etc., and suggest a common origin

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En-echelon Tension Gashes

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Page 10: Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on fractures Fracture: A discontinuity across.
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Definitions and Distinctions - General Nature

• Veins are often associated with joints, when minerals are preciptitated within their openings. Precipitation occurs when P & T conditions are right, or when 2 different solutions mix and subsequently precipitate out minerals.

• Precipitation of minerals with a fracture can effectively seal the fracture.

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Vein

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Page 15: Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on fractures Fracture: A discontinuity across.

Antiaxial vs. syntaxial vein

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Tensile strength and jointing

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Joints Are a type of fracture which form due to tension

They form parallel to the minimum tensile stress Perpendicular to maximum tensile stress Shearing is zero along joints when they form Also called cracks or tensile fractures

Joints form under: Shallow depth, low confining pressure Elastic regime Low temperature, T High pore fluid pressures, Pf

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Joints Joints opens up perpendicular to the maximum

principal tensile stress i.e, along a principal plane of stress

Therefore joints dominantly show separation or opening of the walls of the fractures with no appreciable shear displacement parallel to the plane of the fracture Joints form through the Mode I crack surface

displacement Joints are commonly characterized by two

matching, rough, discontinuous, and curved surfaces, although they are approximated to be smooth, continuous, and planar

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Page 22: Brittle Deformation. Cracks are useful Brittle Deformation Permanent change in rocks by fracture or sliding on fractures Fracture: A discontinuity across.

Modes of crack surface displacement Individual cracks, when loaded, propagate, infinitesimally,

in three different modes: Mode I – Tensile (Opening) Mode

Tensile cracks form normal to the 3 (parallel to the 12 plane)

Crack opens infinitesimally perpendicular to the crack plane Crack grows in its own plane; no bending/changing orientation

Mode II – Sliding Mode One block moves parallel to the crack normal to the fracture front

Mode III – Tearing Mode One block moves parallel to the crack parallel to the fracture front

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Modes of crack surface displacement

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Modes of fracture

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Mode II and III

Both are shear mode Do not grow in their own plane. As they start growing, they immediately either:

Curve Become mode I cracks Spawn new tensile, wing cracks

However, shear fractures and faults are not large mode II or mode III cracks

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Joints The planar approximation is justified given that scale of

geometric irregularities (e.g. joint surface morphologies, curvature amplitude) is commonly very small compared to the size of the fracture surface

Termination of the two opposing surfaces at their distal edge or periphery (fracture front), i.e., a finite extent of the two walls Displacement is zero at the fracture fronts

Involve small relative displacement of the originally contiguous points compared to the in-plane dimensions of the fracture walls

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Fracture Terminations

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Shear Fractures

Fractures along which there has been shearing or displacement

Shear fractures are small, with small displacement

They occur in intact rock during brittle deformation

If the amount of displacement is significant and measurable, the shear fracture is called fault

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Shear Fractures

Shear fractures, form at an angle to the maximum compressive stress and show offset because of the shear traction along the fractures

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Terminology

Fracture front: The line separating the fractured region from the un-fractured part of the rock

Fracture trace: Intersection of the fracture with any surface

Fracture tip: The termination of the fracture along the trace of the fracture

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Joint Surface Morphology

Surface morphology of joints show evidence for initiation, propagation, and arrest

Theoretically, mode I loading in an isotropic, homogeneous material should lead to a smooth propagation with a mirror smooth surface

Joints however are not smooth, because rocks are commonly neither homogeneous nor isotropic

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Out-of-plane Propagation

The orientation of the maximum tensile stress in front of a single crack tip may not be parallel to the normal to the parent crack

Cracks propagate so that “new’ portions of the crack remain normal to the local maximum tensile stress

This requires a crack to leave the plane of the parent crack in order to maintain its orientation relative to the local stress field

This out-of-plane propagation is so common in microscopic scale that leads to the formation of rough, non-smooth fractures surfaces

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Crack Propagation Paths

Out of plane propagation is characterized by a combination of two end member crack propagation paths:

Twist: leads to segmentation of the crack into several smaller crack planes. Represents a rotation of the local maximum tensile stress

in the initial yz plane. Rotation is about an axis in the crack plane || to

propagation direction

Tilt: Causes the crack tip to rotate without segmentation. Rotation is about an axis in the crack plane _|_

propagation direction

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Mesoscopic Joint Surface Although microscopic out-of-plane propagation is

common, joints appear smooth on the mesoscopic scale.

This is due to the homogeneous nature of the remote stress field

Even when the crack leaves its plane, the general propagation path remains normal to the remote maximum tensile stress

The microscopic out-of-plane propagation leads to the development of joint surface morphology

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Joint Surface Ornamentation

An ideal joint consists of a planar, smooth main joint face that is often surrounded by rough fringes.

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Fringes project outward from the main joint face, and are the outermost extent of the joint. They are areas where the energy required to propagate the joint is dissipated. Fringes are characterized by smaller swarms of en-echelon joints that are miss-aligned with respect to the main face.

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Many joint faces have ornamentation that indicate the location that the fracture originated, and the direction that the fracture propagated. These features are:

• Origins - the site of initial porpagation, analogous to the hypocenter of an individual earthquake. Likely the site of some sort of initial flaw in the material.

• Hackles - are linear to curved lines that originate from but converge to the origin.

• Ribs - are present on most surfaces that display hackles, and record the position of the fracture front at any given instant of fracture growth, and are generally sub-perpendicular to the orientation of hackles.

Hackles

Ribs

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HacklesHackles often display a feather-like geometry called plumose structure, where the hackle ‘feathers’ radiate from one or more axis.

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Plumose Structure

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The simplest type of plumose structure are marked by straight plume axes, with hackles that radiate symmetrically from the axis.

Plumose Structure

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Plumose StructureCurving plumes are more complicated, where new plumes may ‘blossom’ off an earlier hackle.

FYI - These fractures propagate at about 300 mph!

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Conchoidal fracture showing ribs but no hackles

Well developed ribs and hackles in a well cemented SS.

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Plumose Structures

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Well developed ribs & hackles in plexiglass

The presence of ornamentation on joint faces indicates that fractures do not form as a smooth, continuous process.

Ornamentation reveals that the process, although occuring at great velocities, is a complex process where the fracture is slowed down, arrested, sped up and made to branch during fracture growth.

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Mechanical stratigraphy - alternating weak and strong layers can produce complex fracture propagation patterns - here, the layers of shale arrest the fractures, which then continue with subsequent increseases in stress.

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Patterns of Intersection and Termination of Joints:Depending on the degree of exposure, the pattern we might see will vary…

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Patterns of Intersection and Termination of Joints: