TY - JOUR
T1 - Cathodoluminescence and fluid inclusion analyses of mineral veins within major thrusts in the Shimanto accretionary complex
T2 - Evidence of hydraulic fracturing during thrusting
AU - Mukoyoshi, Hideki
AU - Hirono, Tetsuro
AU - Sekine, Kotaro
AU - Tsuchiya, Noriyoshi
AU - Soh, Wonn
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments. We are grateful to Nobuo Hirano and Taketo Kikuchi for their technical support in the operation of SEM-CL. We thank Vincent Famin and Yoshitaka Hashimoto for their constructive reviews, and we also thank Editor Akira Takada for editing this paper. This research was supported by the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture, Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists 18740323, 2006.
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - To elucidate fluid-rock interaction in a seismogenic zone along a plate-subduction boundary, we investigated the occurrence of mineral veins within the major thrusts in the Shimanto accretionary complex and examined their microstructures using a cathodoluminescence technique. We found discriminative structures, for example, a jigsaw-puzzle structure, within the quartz veins in the thrusts, which could indicate that hydraulic fracturing occurred by abnormal pore-fluid pressure during thrusting. Pore pressure values, estimated quantitatively by fluid inclusion analyses, were 3-27 MPa higher than the surrounding parts, which may be direct evidence of abnormal pore-fluid pressure. High pore-fluid pressures and subsequent hydraulic fracturing may play an important role within major thrusts along a plate-subduction boundary.
AB - To elucidate fluid-rock interaction in a seismogenic zone along a plate-subduction boundary, we investigated the occurrence of mineral veins within the major thrusts in the Shimanto accretionary complex and examined their microstructures using a cathodoluminescence technique. We found discriminative structures, for example, a jigsaw-puzzle structure, within the quartz veins in the thrusts, which could indicate that hydraulic fracturing occurred by abnormal pore-fluid pressure during thrusting. Pore pressure values, estimated quantitatively by fluid inclusion analyses, were 3-27 MPa higher than the surrounding parts, which may be direct evidence of abnormal pore-fluid pressure. High pore-fluid pressures and subsequent hydraulic fracturing may play an important role within major thrusts along a plate-subduction boundary.
KW - Cathodoluminescence
KW - Hydraulic fracturing
KW - Seismogenic zone
KW - Shimanto accretionary complex
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U2 - 10.1186/BF03352032
DO - 10.1186/BF03352032
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34948907955
SN - 1343-8832
VL - 59
SP - 937
EP - 942
JO - Earth, Planets and Space
JF - Earth, Planets and Space
IS - 8
ER -