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http://dx.doi.org/10.9720/kseg.2017.4.489

Engineering Geological Implications of Fault Zone in Deep Drill Cores: Microtextural Characterization of Pseudotachylite and Seismic Activity  

Choo, Chang-Oh (Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Andong National University)
Jeong, Gyo-Cheol (Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Andong National University)
Publication Information
The Journal of Engineering Geology / v.27, no.4, 2017 , pp. 489-500 More about this Journal
Abstract
It is not rare that pseudotachylite, dark colored rock with glassy texture, is recognizable in deep core samples drilled up to 900 m from the surface. Pseudotachylite with widths varying few to 20 cm is sharply contacted or interlayered with the host rocks composed of Jurassic granite and Precambrian amphibolite gneiss, showing moderately ductile deformation or slight folding. Pseudotachylite occurring at varying depths in the deep drill core are slightly different in texture and thickness. There is evidence of fault gouge at shallower depths, although brittle deformation is pervasive in most drill cores and pseudotachylite is identified at random depth intervals. Under scanning electron microscope (SEM), it is evident that the surface of pseudotachylite is characterized by a smooth, glassy matrix even at micrometer scale and there is little residual fragments in the glass matrix except microcrystals of quartz with embayed shape. Such textural evidence strongly supports the idea that the pseudotachylite was generated through the friction melting related to strong seismic events. Based on X-ray diffraction (XRD) quantitative analysis, it consists of primary minerals such as quartz, feldspars, biotite, amphibole and secondary minerals including clay minerals, calcite and glassy materials. Such mineralogical features of fractured materials including pseudotachylite indicate that the fractured zone might form at low temperatures possibly below $300^{\circ}C$, which implies that the seismic activity related to the formation of pseudotachylite took place at shallow depths, possibly at most 10 km. Identification and characterization of pseudotachylite provide insight into a better understanding of the paleoseismic activity of deep grounds and fundamental information on the stability of candidate disposal sites for high-level radioactive waste.
Keywords
pseudotachylite; deep drill core; glassy matrix; friction melting; seismic activity;
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Times Cited By KSCI : 8  (Citation Analysis)
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