FORMATION AND GROWTH OF NORMAL FAULTS AT THE DIVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY IN ICELAND

被引:125
作者
GUDMUNDSSON, A
机构
[1] Nordic Volcanological Institute, University of Iceland, Reykjavik
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-3121.1992.tb00582.x
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The divergent plate boundary in Iceland is characterized by 40-80 km long and 5-10 km wide swarms of tension fractures (approximately 10(2) m long) and normal faults (approximately 10(3) m long). The upper part of the crust is mainly composed of lava flows, with abundant columnar joints that are mostly perpendicular to the lava contacts. The lava flows are horizontal at the surface of the rift zone but become tilted at the rate of 1-degrees for every 150 m depth in the crust. At the surface of the rift zone the joints are vertical and parallel to the vertical principal stress. Because of tilting of the lava pile, the columnar joints become oblique to this stress, hence becoming potential shear fractures, and form echelon sets at greater depths in the crust. Theoretical considerations suggest that normal faults start to nucleate on sets of en echelon columnar joints and/or large-scale tension fractures at crustal depths of 0.5-1.5 km. The width (depth) must be the smallest (controlling) dimension of many faults. Nevertheless, there is a positive linear relation (r = 0.91) between maximum throw and length of the Holocene faults. If the faults grow as self-similar structures, the throw-length relationship can be explained by a similar relation between fault length and width.
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页码:464 / 471
页数:8
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