Fluid pressure cycles, variations in permeability, and weakening mechanisms along low-angle normal faults; the Tellaro Detachment, Italy
Fluid pressure cycles, variations in permeability, and weakening mechanisms along low-angle normal faults; the Tellaro Detachment, Italy
Geological Society of America Bulletin (May 2015) 127 (11-12): 1689-1710
- alkaline earth metals
- Apennines
- breccia
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- carbonate rocks
- cement
- Cenozoic
- cross sections
- crust
- detachment faults
- dolostone
- Europe
- faults
- fluid inclusions
- fluid phase
- fluid pressure
- geochemistry
- geologic thermometry
- inclusions
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- Italy
- limestone
- metals
- models
- normal faults
- Northern Apennines
- O-18/O-16
- oxygen
- permeability
- precipitation
- secondary structures
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentary structures
- Southern Europe
- Sr-87/Sr-86
- stable isotopes
- stress
- strontium
- structural analysis
- stylolites
- upper crust
- veins
- Tellaro Fault
Classical frictional fault reactivation models indicate that slip along misoriented fault planes is not possible under most conditions. Nevertheless, active or exhumed low-angle normal faults have been described in many settings worldwide. This discrepancy is addressed by contrasting models: (1) those proposing that low-angle normal faults result from postkinematic passive rotation of former high-angle extensional faults; and (2) those proposing that specific conditions can promote slip along misoriented fault planes. This paper describes the Tellaro detachment, a mid-late Miocene low-angle normal fault that was responsible for approximately 500 m of tectonic vertical thinning in the carbonate-dominated Triassic to Lower Miocene succession of the Northern Apennines, Italy. By integrating structural, petrographic, isotopic, and fluid inclusion data, we show that: (1) the main kinematic activity of the Tellaro detachment occurred between approximately 8 and 4 km depths and peak temperature approximately 190 degrees C; (2) dilational breccias, tens of cubic meters in volume, are frequently associated with major low-angle fault segments; (3) slip along misoriented planes was favored by elevated fluid pressures and low differential stress; and (4) the fault system was characterized by transient permeability pulses and overpressure buildups, associated with multiple fracturing and cementation events that caused the downward migration of master slip surfaces. Results presented in this study show that: (1) in a fluid-active regime, continental crustal thinning can occur for shallow values of fault dip; (2) low-angle normal faults have a great influence on fluid circulation within the upper crust; and (3) episodic permeability enhancement and destruction in detachment faults can promote overpressure buildups, triggering deformation episodes.