Shear localisation in anisotropic, non-linear viscous materials that develop a CPO: A numerical study

Publication date

2020-05-26T13:00:00Z

2021-07-01T05:10:16Z

2019-07-01

2020-05-26T13:00:00Z

Abstract

Localisation of ductile deformation in rocks is commonly found at all scales from crustal shear zones down to grain scale shear bands. Of the various mechanisms for localisation, mechanical anisotropy has received relatively little attention, especially in numerical modelling. Mechanical anisotropy can be due to dislocation creep of minerals (e.g. ice or mica) and/or layering in rocks (e.g. bedding, cleavage). We simulated simple-shear deformation of a locally anisotropic, single-phase power-law rheology material up to shear strain of five. Localisation of shear rate in narrow shear bands occurs, depending on the magnitude of anisotropy and the stress exponent. At high anisotropy values, strain-rate frequency distributions become approximately log-normal with heavy, exponential tails. Localisation due to anisotropy is scale-independent and thus provides a single mechanism for a self-organised hierarchy of shear bands and zones from mm-to km-scales. The numerical simulations are compared with the natural example of the Northern Shear Belt at Cap de Creus, NE Spain.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Anisotropia; Anisotropy

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2019.03.006

Journal of Structural Geology, 2019, vol. 124, p. 81-90

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2019.03.006

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Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Elsevier Ltd, 2019

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es

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