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  • Shear zones – A review
    Fossen, Haakon; Cavalcante, Geane Carolina G.

    Earth-science reviews, August 2017, 2017-08-00, Letnik: 171
    Journal Article

    Strain in the lithosphere localizes into tabular zones known as shear zones that grow from small outcrop-size individual zones to large composite structures. Nucleation is related to distributed microscale flaws or mesoscale structures such as fractures and dikes, and they soon establish displacement profiles similar to faults. Also similar to faults, they grow in width and length primarily by segment linkage as they accumulate strain and displacement, and this process typically results in shear zone networks. Consequently, mature shear zones are heterogeneous and composite zones characterized by anastomosing patterns and local variations in thickness and finite strain. Kinematic vorticity estimates suggest that most shear zones deviate from simple shear, and even if subsimple shear may be a useful reference model in many cases, finite strain data indicate that many shear zones involve three-dimensional combinations of coaxial and non-coaxial deformation, such as transpression and transtension. Strain geometry and kinematic vorticity can vary significantly within shear zone networks, which makes it difficult to estimate the bulk deformation type for a composite shear zone or shear zone network. However, perhaps the most challenging aspect is that of progressive deformation, i.e. to what extent and how flow parameters change during deformation (non-steady state deformation), which needs to be addressed by a combination of detailed field observations and numerical modeling.