Earthquake Rupture at Focal Depth, Part I: Structure and Rupture of the Pretorius Fault, TauTona Mine, South Africa

V. Heesakkers, S. Murphy, Z. Reches*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

50 Scopus citations

Abstract

We analyze the structure of the Archaean Pretorius fault in TauTona mine, South Africa, as well as the rupture-zone that recently reactivated it. The analysis is part of the Natural Earthquake Laboratory in South African Mines (NELSAM) project that utilizes the access to 3. 6 km depth provided by the mining operations. The Pretorius fault is a ~10 km long, oblique-strike-slip fault with displacement of up to 200 m that crosscuts fine to very coarse grain quartzitic rocks in TauTona mine. We identify here three structural zones within the fault-zone: (1) an outer damage zone, ~100 m wide, of brittle deformation manifested by multiple, widely spaced fractures and faults with slip up to 3 m; (2) an inner damage zone, 25-30 m wide, with high density of anastomosing conjugate sets of fault segments and fractures, many of which carry cataclasite zones; and (3) a dominant segment, with a cataclasite zone up to 50 cm thick that accommodated most of the Archaean slip of the Pretorius fault, and is regarded as the 'principal slip zone' (PSZ). This fault-zone structure indicates that during its Archaean activity, the Pretorius fault entered the mature fault stage in which many slip events were localized along a single, PSZ. The mining operations continuously induce earthquakes, including the 2004, M2. 2 event that rejuvenated the Pretorius fault in the NELSAM project area. Our analysis of the M2. 2 rupture-zone shows that (1) slip occurred exclusively along four, pre-existing large, quasi-planer segments of the ancient fault-zone; (2) the slipping segments contain brittle cataclasite zones up to 0. 5 m thick; (3) these segments are not parallel to each other; (4) gouge zones, 1-5 mm thick, composed of white 'rock-flour' formed almost exclusively along the cataclasite-host rock contacts of the slipping segments; (5) locally, new, fresh fractures branched from the slipping segments and propagated in mixed shear-tensile mode; (6) the maximum observed shear displacement is 25 mm in oblique-normal slip. The mechanical analysis of this rupture-zone is presented in Part II (Heesakkers et al., Earthquake Rupture at Focal Depth, Part II: Mechanics of the 2004 M2. 2 Earthquake Along the Pretorius Fault, TauTona mine, South Africa 2011, this volume).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2395-2425
Number of pages31
JournalPure and Applied Geophysics
Volume168
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Brittle faulting
  • deep mine
  • earthquake mechanics
  • earthquake rupture zone
  • fault reactivation
  • fault rocks

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