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Initiation and development of tectonic stylolite – Vein system in micritic limestone (Les Matelles, France).

Authors :
Ballas, Grégory
Raynaud, Suzanne
Lopez, Michel
Oliot, Emilien
Sizun, Jean-Pierre
Caillaud, Jacinthe
Barou, Fabrice
Ildefonse, Benoit
Source :
Journal of Structural Geology. Jun2024, Vol. 183, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In this study, we describe the characteristics of tectonic stylolites and related veins affecting a low-porosity micritic limestone (Jurassic carbonates, Les Matelles, South of France) in order to unravel the conditions of initiation and interaction between pressure-solution and fracturing in such rock. Field description, various petrographic and microstructural investigations (cathodoluminescence, SEM imaging, EBSD analysis), and petrophysical/geochemical analyses (Hg porosimetry, XRD, EPMA) are used. We document that pressure-solution initiates at micropores and propagates along calcite grain contacts, connecting surrounding stylolite micro-segments, and progressively concentrates insoluble material such as clays and siliceous particles. The dissolved material is evacuated to the veins where the newly-formed porous space is progressively filled by calcite cement. These deformation processes are strictly restricted to the stylolitic interface and veins, as no modification of porosity or grain deformation is detected in the neighboring host rock. This is due to the low-permeability of the surrounding host rock impeding the evacuation of dissolved material and fluids through interstitial porosity around the pressure-solution zone, leading to overpressure and veins formation. The water release and microporosity caused by diagenesis of the clay fraction (smectite-illite transformation) are discussed as key diagenetic processes instigating the conditions of pressure-solution initiation, then tectonic stylolite formation in low-porosity limestones. • The pressure-solution process is restricted to the stylolitic interface. • Stylolites propagate along grain contact and concentrate insoluble material. • Soluble material is evacuated to the vein formed by hydraulic fracturing. • The material transfer from stylolite to vein is a closed system. • Clay diagenesis releasing water and porosity allows the pressure-solution initiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01918141
Volume :
183
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Structural Geology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177316814
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2024.105130