Page 16 - Microtectonics
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2     1  ·  A Framework of Microtectonic Studies
           1.1     1.1                                            Box 1.1  Fabric, texture, microstructure
                   Introduction
                                                                  In this book we mainly deal with fabrics. A fabric “includes the
                                                                  complete spatial and geometrical configuration of all those
                                          th
                   From their first use in the 19  century, thin sections of
                                                                  components that make up a rock. It covers concepts such as
                   rocks have been an important source of information for  texture, structure and crystallographic preferred orientation“
                   geologists. Many of the older textbooks on structural ge-  (Hobbs et al. 1976). The parts that make up a fabric, also known
                   ology, however, did not treat microscopic aspects of struc-  as fabric elements, should be penetratively and repeatedly de-
                   tures, while petrologists would describe microscopic  veloped throughout a volume of rock; a single fault in a vol-
                                                                  ume of rock is not considered to be part of the fabric, but a
                   structures as, for example, lepidoblastic or nematoblastic
                                                                  large number of parallel foliation planes are. Fabric elements
                   without paying much attention to kinematic and dynamic  are therefore dependent on scale (cf. Fig. 2.4). A volume of rock
                   implications. During the last decades, however, structural  may have a random fabric, i.e. a random distribution and ori-
                   geologists learned to profit from the wealth of data that  entation of its elements or, more commonly, a non-random fab-
                   can be obtained from the geometry of structures studied  ric, including foliations and lineations.
                   in thin section, and metamorphic petrologists have ap-  In this book, we mainly deal with fabrics on microscopic
                                                                  scale, or microfabrics. Microfabric elements may include grain
                   preciated the relation of structural evolution on the thin  shape, grain boundaries, deformation lamellae, aggregates of
                   section scale and metamorphic processes.       grains with similar shape, and lattice preferred orientation.
                     Deformed rocks are one of the few direct sources of  In the non-geological literature about metals and ceramics,
                   information available for the reconstruction of tectonic  the term texture is generally used for lattice-preferred orienta-
                   evolution. Nevertheless, observations on the geometry of  tion. On the other hand, most of the older textbooks on meta-
                                                                  morphic petrology (e.g. Turner 1968; Miyashiro 1973; Best 1982;
                   structures in deformed rocks should be used with care;  Williams et al. 1982; Bucher and Frey 1994) make a distinction
                   they are the end product of an often complex evolution  between the texture and the structure of a metamorphic rock.
                   and we can only hope to reconstruct this evolution if we  In these texts, texture refers to the geometrical aspects of the
                   correctly interpret the end stage. Simple geometries such  component particles of a rock including size, shape and ar-
                   as folds can be formed in many ways and it may seem  rangement, whereas structure usually refers to the presence of
                                                                  compositional layering, folds, foliation, lineation, etc. In fact
                   hopeless to try and reconstruct a complex evolutionary
                                                                  there is no clear difference between the two concepts and the
                   sequence from geometrical information only. However,  subcommission on the systematics of metamorphic rocks of
                   despite the simple geometry of our face, we can individu-  the IUGS recommends substituting the term texture by micro-
                   ally recognise most of the six billion people on our planet.  structure. In this book, we use the terms microstructure and
                   It is likely that structures in rocks also contain a large amount  microfabric (see also Sect. 1.1) as synonyms.
                   of detail, which we cannot (yet) recognise and interpret
                   because we are not trained to do so, and partly because we
                   do not know what to look for. It is interesting to page through  chapter can be read before, but also in conjunction with
                   old publications on microstructures, e.g. on inclusions in  the other chapters.
                   garnet or on porphyroclasts, to see how drawings evolved  In theory, one could expect that a sedimentary rock,
                   from simple to complex while understanding of the proc-  which is buried, deformed, metamorphosed and brought
                   esses related to the development of these structures in-  back to the surface, should have the same mineral compo-
                   creased. At any time, some degree of misinterpretation of  sition as the original sediment if perfect equilibrium con-
                   structural evolution is unavoidable and part of the nor-  ditions were to be attained at each stage. A simple fabric
                   mal process of increasing our understanding of the sub-  should be developed in such a case in response to gradual
                   ject. This book is therefore a-state-of-the-art description  changes in the stress field and in metamorphic conditions.
                   of microstructures and their interpretation.  Fortunately for the geologist, who relies on structures and
                     Observations on the microstructure or fabric of a rock  mineral assemblages in deformed rocks as a source of in-
                   (Box 1.1), specifically in thin section, can be used in two  formation, this is almost never the case. In most deformed
                   major fields. They can be applied to thematic studies, to  rocks, structures with different style and orientation and
                   understand mechanisms of rock deformation and meta-  minerals, which represent different metamorphic grades,
                   morphism; or they can be used to reconstruct the struc-  overprint each other. This means that equilibrium is gener-
                   tural and metamorphic history of a volume of rock. Thin  ally not attained at each stage: mineral assemblages rep-
                   section studies are mostly in the latter field. Because such  resentative of different metamorphic conditions may be
                   thin section studies can serve to reconstruct tectonic evo-  ‘frozen in’ at different stages during burial and uplift. With
                   lution, we use the term microtectonics.      overprint we mean that structures or mineral assemblages
                     This chapter is not only meant as a general introduc-  are superposed on each other and must therefore differ
                   tion to the subject of microtectonics, but also serves as a  in age; this may be visible through crosscutting relations,
                   definition of the framework within which we see studies  overgrowth, or even differences in deformation intensity.
                   in microtectonics. As such, it contains terminology that is  In practice, however, overprinting relations can be diffi-
                   explained only later in the text and in the glossary. This  cult to establish. This book mainly serves to illustrate the
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