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How Hydrothermal Cooling and Magmatic Sill Intrusions Control Flip-Flop Faulting at Ultraslow-Spreading Mid-Ocean Ridges
  • Arne Glink,
  • Jörg Hasenclever
Arne Glink
University of Hamburg

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Jörg Hasenclever
University of Hamburg
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Abstract

Oceanic lithosphere created at mid-ocean ridges (MOR) is shaped by a complex interplay of magmatic, tectonic and hydrothermal processes. Where melt budget decreases at (ultra)slow spreading rates, the tectonic mode changes from normal to detachment faulting. We investigate an endmember type of detachment faulting, the so-called “flip-flop” detachment mode, observed exclusively at almost amagmatic sections of ultraslow-spreading MORs (e.g. Southwest Indian Ridge 62°E to 65°E): Active detachments migrate across the ridge axis towards the hanging wall side until they are superseded by a new on-axis fault of opposite polarity. Using a steady-state temperature field, numerical experiments by Bickert et al. (EPSL, 2020, 10.1016/j.epsl.2019.116048) show that an axial temperature maximum is essential to trigger flip-flop faults by focusing flexural strain in the footwall of the active fault. However, ridge segments without a significant melt budget are more likely to be in a transient thermal state controlled, at least in part, by the faulting dynamics themselves. In our study we investigate (1) which processes have first order control on the thermal structure of the lithosphere, (2) their respective feedbacks on the mechanical evolution of the lithosphere, and (3) how they facilitate flip-flop detachment faulting. We present results of 2-D thermo-mechanical numerical modelling including serpentinization reactions and dynamic grain size evolution. The model features a novel form of parametrized hydrothermal cooling along fault zones as well as the thermal and rheological effects of periodic sill intrusions. We find that both hydrothermal cooling of the active fault zone and periodic sill intrusions in the footwall are essential for entering the flip-flop detachment mode. Hydrothermal cooling of the fault zone pushes the temperature maximum into the footwall, while intrusions near the temperature maximum further weaken the rock and facilitate the opening of new faults with opposite polarity. We conclude that this interplay of hydrothermal cooling and magmatic intrusions is required to produce the observed flip-flop faulting. Our model allows us to put constraints on the magnitude of both processes, and we obtain reasonable melt budgets and hydrothermal heat fluxes only if both are considered.