Artículo de revista
Hydrothermal alteration in an exhumed crustal fault zone: Testing geochemical mobility in the Caleta Coloso Fault, Atacama Fault System, Northern Chile
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Tectonophysics 623 (2014) 147–168
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2014.03.024
Autor
Arancibia, Gloria
Fujita, Kazuna
Hoshino, Kenichi
Mitchell, Thomas M.
Cembrano, José
Gomila, Rodrigo
Morata Céspedes, Diego
Faulkner, Daniel R.
Rempe, Marieke
Institución
Resumen
Crustal scale strike slip fault zones have complex and heterogeneous permeability structures, playing an important
role in fluid migration in the crust. Exhumed faults provide insights into the interplay among deformation
mechanisms, fluid–rock interactions and bulk chemical redistributions. We determined the whole-rock
geochemistry andmineral chemistry of the fault core of the Caleta Coloso Fault inNorthern Chile, in order to constrain
the physical and chemical conditions that lead to strong hydrothermal alteration. The strike-slip Caleta
Coloso Fault core has a multiple-core architecture, consisting of alternate low strain rocks (protolith, weakly
deformed protolith and protocataclasites) and high-strain strands (cataclasites and discrete band of
ultracataclasite) derived from a Jurassic tonalite. Hydrothermal alteration associated with fault-related fluid
flow is characterized by a very low-grade association consisting of chlorite, epidote, albite, quartz and calcite.
Chlorite thermometry indicates T-values in the range of 284 to 352 °C, no variations in mineral composition or
T-values were observed among different cataclastic units. Mass balance and volume change calculations show
significantly larger chemical mobility in the protocataclasites than in the cataclasite (and ultracataclasite). This
suggests that fluid flow and chemical alteration are strongly controlled by deformation being protocataclasite
relatively more permeable than cataclasite. Chlorite precipitation and grain reduction in cataclasite (and
ultracataclasite) would reduce permeability acting as a barrier for fluid flow. Chemical mobility and volume
changes in the Coloso Fault core suggest different effective fluid/flow ratios during amalgamation of subsequent
and subparallel deformation bands that finally control the fracture–channeling allowing fault-related fluid–flow
into each of them.