Articles | Volume 15, issue 10
https://doi.org/10.5194/se-15-1233-2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/se-15-1233-2024
Research article
 | 
02 Oct 2024
Research article |  | 02 Oct 2024

Influence of water on crystallographic preferred orientation patterns in a naturally deformed quartzite

Jeffrey M. Rahl, Brendan Moehringer, Kenneth S. Befus, and John S. Singleton

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Subject area: Tectonic plate interactions, magma genesis, and lithosphere deformation at all scales | Editorial team: Structural geology and tectonics, paleoseismology, rock physics, experimental deformation | Discipline: Structural geology
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Cited articles

Bakker, R. J. and Jansen, J. B. H.: A mechanism for preferential H2O leakage from fluid inclusions in quartz, based on TEM observations, Contrib. Miner. Petr., 116, 7–20, 1994. 
Beran, A.: Infrared spectroscopy of micas, Rev. Mineral. Geochem., 46, 351–369, 2002. 
Blacic, J. D.: Plastic-deformation mechanisms in quartz: the effect of water, Tectonophysics, 27, 271–294, 1975. 
Blacic, J. D. and Christie, J. M.: Plasticity and hydrolytic weakening of quartz single crystals, J. Geophys. Res.-Sol. Ea., 89, 4223–4239, 1984. 
Cordier, P. and Doukhan, J.-C.: Water solubility in quartz and its influence on ductility, Eur. J. Mineral., 1, 221–238, https://doi.org/10.1127/ejm/1/2/0221, 1989. 
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Short summary
At the high temperatures present in the deeper crust, minerals such as quartz can flow much like silly putty. The detailed mechanisms of how atoms are reorganized depends upon several factors, such as the temperature and the rate of which the mineral changes shape. We present observations from a naturally deformed rock showing that the amount of water present also influences the type of deformation in quartz, with implications for geological interpretations.