434 research outputs found
Magnetic anisotropy reveals Acadian transpressional fabrics in an Appalachian ophiolite (Thetford Mines, Canada)
SUMMARY Magnetic anisotropy has proved effective in characterizing primary, spreading-related magmatic fabrics in Mesozoic (Tethyan) ophiolites, for example in documenting lower oceanic crustal flow. The potential for preservation of primary magnetic fabrics has not been tested, however, in older Palaeozoic ophiolites, where anisotropy may record regional strain during polyphase deformation. Here, we present anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility results from the Ordovician Thetford Mines ophiolite (Canada) that experienced two major phases of post-accretion deformation, during the Taconian and Acadian orogenic events. Magnetic fabrics consistent with modal layering in gabbros are observed at one locality, suggesting that primary fabrics may survive deformation locally in low strain zones. However, at remaining sites rocks with different magmatic origins have consistent magnetic fabrics, reflecting structurally controlled shape preferred orientations of iron-rich phases. Subhorizontal NW-SE-oriented minimum principal susceptibility axes correlate with poles to cleavage observed in overlying post-obduction, pre-Acadian sedimentary formations, indicating that the magnetic foliation in the ophiolite formed during regional NW-SE Acadian shortening. Maximum principal susceptibility axes plunging steeply to the NE are orthogonal to the orientation of regional Acadian fold axes, and are consistent with subvertical tectonic stretching. This magnetic lineation is parallel to the shape preferred orientation of secondary amphibole crystals and is interpreted to reflect grain growth during Acadian dextral transpression. This structural style has been widely reported along the Appalachian orogen, but the magnetic fabric data presented here provide the first evidence for transpression recorded in an Appalachian ophiolite.</jats:p
Self-organisation of tip functionalised elongated colloidal particles
Weakly attractive interactions between the tips of rod-like colloidal
particles affect their liquid-crystal phase behaviour due to a subtle interplay
between enthalpy and entropy. Here, we employ molecular dynamics simulations on
semi-flexible, repulsive bead-spring chains of which one of the two end beads
attract each other. We calculate the phase diagram as a function of both the
volume fraction of the chains and the strength of the attractive potential. We
identify a large number of phases that include isotropic, nematic, smectic A,
smectic B and crystalline states. For tip attraction energies lower than the
thermal energy, our results are qualitatively consistent with experimental
findings: we find that an increase of the attraction strength shifts the
nematic to smectic A phase transition to lower volume fractions, with only
minor effect on the stability of the other phases. For sufficiently strong tip
attraction, the nematic phase disappears completely, in addition leading to the
destabilisation of the isotropic phase. In order to better understand the
underlying physics of these phenomena, we also investigate the clustering of
the particles at their attractive tips and the effective molecular field
experienced by the particles in the smectic A phase. Based on these results, we
argue that the clustering of the tips only affects the phase stability if
lamellar structures (``micelles'') are formed. We find that an increase of the
attraction strength increases the degree of order in the layered
phases.Interestingly, we also find evidence for the existence of an
anti-ferroelectric smectic A phase transition induced by the interaction
between the tips. A simple Maier-Saupe-McMillan model confirms our findings
Switching deformation mode and mechanisms during subduction of continental crust: a case study from Alpine Corsica
The switching in deformation mode (from distributed to localized)
and mechanisms (viscous versus frictional) represent a relevant issue in the
frame of crustal deformation, being also connected with the concept of the
brittle–ductile transition and seismogenesis. In a subduction environment,
switching in deformation mode and mechanisms and scale of localization may be
inferred along the subduction interface, in a transition zone between the
highly coupled (seismogenic zone) and decoupled deeper aseismic domain
(stable slip). However, the role of brittle precursors in
nucleating crystal-plastic shear zones has received more and more
consideration being now recognized as fundamental in some cases for the
localization of deformation and shear zone development, thus representing a
case in which switching deformation mechanisms and scale and style of
localization (deformation mode) interact and relate to each other. This
contribution analyses an example of a millimetre-scale shear zone localized
by brittle precursor formed within a host granitic protomylonite. The studied
structures, developed in ambient pressure–temperature (P–T) conditions of low-grade blueschist facies
(temperature T of ca. 300 °C and pressure P ≥ 0. 70 GPa)
during involvement of Corsican continental crust in the Alpine subduction. We
used a multidisciplinary approach by combining detailed microstructural and
petrographic analyses, crystallographic preferred orientation by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), and
palaeopiezometric studies on a selected sample to support an evolutionary
model and deformation path for subducted continental crust. We infer that the
studied structures, possibly formed by transient instability associated with
fluctuations of pore fluid pressure and episodic strain rate variations, may
be considered as a small-scale example of fault behaviour associated with a
cycle of interseismic creep and coseismic rupture or a new analogue for
episodic tremors and slow-slip structures. Our case study represents,
therefore, a fossil example of association of fault structures related to
stick-slip strain accommodation during subduction of continental crust
Feedback between high-pressure genesis of abiotic methane and strain localization in subducted carbonate rocks
AbstractFluid-rock interactions exert key control over rock rheology and strain localization. Redox may significantly affect the reaction pathways and, thereby, the mechanical properties of the rock. This effect may become critical in volatile-rich, redox sensitive rocks such as carbonate-rich lithologies, the breakdown of which can significantly modify the net volume change of fluid-mediated reactions. Subduction focus the largest recycling of crustal carbonates and the most intense seismic activity on Earth. Nevertheless, the feedbacks between deep carbon mobilization and deformation remain poorly investigated. We present quantitative microstructural results from natural samples and thermodynamic modeling indicating that percolation of reducing fluids exerts strong control on the mobilization of carbon and on strain localization in subducted carbonate rocks. Fluid-mediated carbonate reduction progressed from discrete domains unaffected by ductile deformation into localized shear zones deforming via diffusion creep, dissolution-precipitation creep and grain boundary sliding. Grain-size reduction and creep cavitation along localized shear zones enhanced fluid-carbonate interactions and fluid channelization. These results indicate that reduction of carbonate rocks can exert an important positive feedback on strain localization and fluid channelization, with potential implications on seismic activity and transport of deep hydrocarbon-bearing fluids.</jats:p
Crystallographic control and texture inheritance during mylonitization of coarse grained quartz veins
Quartz veins within Rieserferner pluton underwent deformation during post-magmatic cooling at temperature around 450 \ub0C. Different crystallographic orientations of cm-sized quartz vein crystals conditioned the evolution of microstructures and crystallographic preferred orientations (CPO) during vein-parallel simple shear up to high shear strains (\u3b3 48 10). For \u3b3 b 2, crystals stretched to ribbons of variable aspect ratios. The highest aspect ratios resulted from {m}baN glide in ribbons with c-axis sub-parallel to the shear zone vorticity Y-axis. Ribbons with c-axis orthogonal to Y (XZ-type ribbons) were stronger and hardened more quickly: they show lower aspect ratios and \ufb01ne (grain size ~10\u201320 \u3bcm) recrystallization along sets of microshear zones (\u3bcSZs) exploiting crystallographic planes. Distortion of XZ-type ribbons and recrystallization preferentially exploited the slip systems with misorientation axis close to Y. New grains of \u3bcSZs initiated by subgrain rotation recrystallization (SGR) and thereupon achieved high angle misorientations by a concurrent process of heterogeneous rigid grain rotation around Y associated with the con\ufb01ned shear within the \u3bcSZ. Dauphin\ue9 twinning occurred pervasively, but did not play a dominant role on \u3bcSZ nucleation. Recrystallization became widespread at \u3b3 N 2 and pervasive at \u3b3 48 10. Ultramylonitic quartz veins are \ufb01ne grained (~10 \u3bcm, similar to new grains of \u3bcSZ) and show a CPO banding resulting in a bulk c-axis CPO with a Y-maximum, as part of a single girdle about orthogonal to the foliation, and orientations at the pole \ufb01gure periphery at moderate to high angle to the foliation. This bulk CPO derives from steady-state SGR associated with preferential activity, in the different CPO bands, of slip systems generating subgrain boundaries with misorientation axes close to Y. The CPO of individual recrystallized bands is largely inherited from the original crystallographic orientation of the ribbons (and therefore vein crystals) from which they derived. High strain and pervasive recrystallization were not enough to reset the initial crystallographic heterogeneity and this CPO memory is explained by the dominance of SGR. This contrast with experimental observation of a rapid erasure of a pristine CPO by cannibalism from grains with the most favourably oriented slip system under dominant grain boundary migration recrystallization
Shifting paradigms in two common abdominal surgical emergencies during the pandemic
During the pandemic there was a reduction in access to the hospital and surgical treatment of appendicitis and cholecystitis at a global level. Some strategies adopted during this challenging time could be applied even after the emergency has been controlled
Exploration into the hidden world of Mozambique’s sky island forests:new discoveries of reptiles and amphibians
We carried out a survey of reptiles and amphibians within Afromontane forest and woodland slopes of three inselbergs in northern Mozambique (Mount Mabu, Mount Namuli, and Mount Ribáuè). A total of 56 species (22 amphibians and 34 reptiles) were recorded during the current survey. Our findings substantially increase the number of herpetofaunal species recorded from these mountains (Mount Ribáuè 59%, Mount Mabu 37%, and Mount Namuli 11% of the total species), including one new country record and several putative new species. An updated checklist of the herpetofauna of these mountains is presented
Myrmekite and strain weakening in granitoid mylonites
At mid-crustal conditions, deformation of feldspar is mainly accommodated by a combination of fracturing, dissolution\u2013precipitation, and reaction-weakening mechanisms. In particular, K-feldspar is reaction-weakened by the formation of strain-induced myrmekite \u2013 a \ufb01ne-grained symplectite of plagioclase and quartz. Here we use electron backscattered diffraction to (i) investigate the microstructure of a granodiorite mylonite, developed at 3c 450 \ub0C during cooling of the Rieserferner pluton (Eastern Alps); and (ii) assess the microstructural processes and the weakening associated with myrmekite development. Our analysis shows that the crystallographic orientation of plagioclase in pristine myrmekite was controlled by that of the replaced K- feldspar. Myrmekite nucleation resulted in both grain-size reduction and anti-clustered phase mixing by heterogeneous nucleation of quartz and plagioclase. The \ufb01ne grain size of sheared myrmekite promoted grain-size-sensitive creep mechanisms including \ufb02uid-assisted grain boundary sliding in plagioclase, coupled with heterogeneous nucleation of quartz within creep cavitation pores. Flow laws, calculated for monomineralic quartz, feldspar, and quartz + plagioclase aggregates (sheared myrmekite) during deformation at 450 \ub0C, show that grain-size-sensitive creep in sheared myrmekite accommodated strain rates several orders of magnitude higher than monomineralic quartz layers deforming by dislocation creep. Therefore, diffusion creep and grain size-sensitive processes contributed signi\ufb01cantly to bulk rock weakening during mylonitization. Our results have implications for modelling the rheology of the felsic middle crust
High Prevalence of the Amphibian Chytrid Fungus (\u3cem\u3eBatrachochytrium dendrobatidis\u3c/em\u3e) across Multiple Taxa and Localities in the Highlands of Ethiopia
Surveys of the potentially lethal amphibian chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis - Bd) in Africa are patchy, especially in some regions of high species endemicity. We present results of the first Bd surveys of wild amphibians in Ethiopia, for two upland regions on either side of the Rift Valley: the Bale Mountains and the Kaffa region. Surveys were opportunistic so that robust interpretation of the data is limited. Utilizing diagnostic qPCR assays, 51 out of 120 frogs (14 species in 10 genera) tested positive for Bd at altitudes of 1,620–3,225 m, across all genera and species, and all but two localities. Prevalence was not significantly different between the two regions or two years (2008, 2009) sampled. Prevalence and parasite load was higher in species with aquatic tadpoles than those with terrestrial early life-history stages, but these differences were not significant. Impacts of Bd infection were not investigated, but no dead or dying frogs were found. This is the first report of Bd in Ethiopia, a country in which approximately 40% of its more than 60 species are endemic. Declines have occurred in some frog species in some localities in Ethiopia, and although habitat degradation is a likely cause in at least some places, further studies of Bd in Ethiopia are required to understand if it is a threat
- …