The role of trapped fluids during the development and deformation of a carbonate/shale intra-wedge tectonic melange (Mt. Massico, Southern Apennines, Italy)
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Titre | The role of trapped fluids during the development and deformation of a carbonate/shale intra-wedge tectonic melange (Mt. Massico, Southern Apennines, Italy) |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2020 |
Auteurs | Smeraglia L, Aldega L, Bernasconi SM, Billi A, Boschi C, Caracausi A, Carminati E, Franchini S, Rizzo ALuca, Rossetti F, Vignaroli G |
Journal | JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY |
Volume | 138 |
Pagination | 104086 |
Date Published | SEP |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 0191-8141 |
Mots-clés | Fluid-rock interaction, Fold and thrust belt, Noble gases, Stable and clumped isotopes, Tectonic melange |
Résumé | Numerous studies exist on exhumed tectonic melanges along subduction channels whereas, in accretionary wedge interiors, deformation mechanisms and related fluid circulation in tectonic melanges are still underex-plored. We combine structural and microstructural observations with geochemical (stable and clumped isotopes and isotope composition of noble gases in fluid inclusions of calcite veins) and U-Pb geochronological data to define deformation mechanisms and syn-tectonic fluid circulation within the Mt. Massico intra-wedge tectonic melange, located in the inner part of the central-southern Apennines accretionary wedge, Italy. This melange developed by shear deformation at the base of a elastic succession. Deformation was characterized by disruption of the primary bedding, mixing, and deformation of relicts of competent olistoliths and strata within a weak matrix of deformed clayey and marly interbeds. Recurrent cycles of mutually overprinting fracturing/veining and pressure-solution processes generated a block-in-matrix texture. The geochemical signatures of syntectonic calcite veins suggest calcite precipitation in a closed system from warm (108 degrees-147 degrees C) paleofluids, with delta O-18 vlaues between +9%o and 14 parts per thousand, such as trapped pore waters after extensive O-18 exchange with the local limestone host rock and/or derived by clay dehydration processes at T > 120 degrees C. The He-3/He-4 ratios in fluid inclusions are lower than 0.1 Ra, indicating that He was exclusively sourced from the crust. We conclude that: (1) intraformational rheological contrasts, inherited trapped fluids, and low-permeability barriers such as marly-shaly matrix, can promote the generation of intra-wedge tectonic melanges and the development of transient fluid overpressure; (2) clay-rich tectonic melanges, developed along intra-wedge decollement layers, may generate low-permeability barriers hindering the fluid redistribution within accretionary wedges. |
DOI | 10.1016/j.jsg.2020.104086 |