TY - JOUR
T1 - Upper bound on stylolite roughness as indicator for amount of dissolution
AU - Laronne Ben-Itzhak, Leehee
AU - Aharonov, Einat
AU - Toussaint, Renaud
AU - Sagy, Amir
N1 - Funding Information: This research was sponsored by ExxonMobil and by an ISF Grant 751/08 . We deeply thank Dr. Hagai Ron for help in the field and in coring samples, Dr. Kul Karcz for many discussions and ideas and ExxonMobil for assistance in thin-section preparation.
PY - 2012/7/1
Y1 - 2012/7/1
N2 - Stylolites are rough surfaces that form by localized dissolution. Despite their abundance in carbonates and sandstones, and their importance for fluid flow and rock deformation, many fundamental issues concerning their structure and evolution are still unresolved. This manuscript studies the roughening of long parallel stylolites. Here we report measurements of stylolite surface roughness at a scale larger than ever measured before (10 -2-10 1m). Measurements were performed using ground-based-LIDAR on 6 naturally exposed surfaces of >km long stylolites in Northern Israel, producing a topographic map of the surfaces, from which roughness characteristics were derived. Our results show that for length scales below ~50cm, the stylolite morphology exhibits self-affine behavior, with a Hurst exponent H~0.65, consistent with previous studies made on smaller samples. The self-affine behavior changes for measurements made on scales above 50cm, with H decreasing almost to zero on long length scales. This observed upper-bound of self-affine roughness is measured here for the first time, but has been previously predicted by theory (Ebner et al., 2009b; Koehn et al., 2007). Our measurements support these theoretical models and together with them present a scenario in which the investigated stylolites evolve from preferential dissolution along an existing surface that was initially smooth and progressively roughened with time. Such a mechanism of stylolites growth is different from previously suggested mechanisms for other classes of stylolites, which might propagate sideways from an initial defect. Based on the theoretical roughening model that we adopted, the upper limit to fractality for this class of stylolites may be used as a measure of the amount of dissolution on stylolites. Indeed, the amount of dissolution on the stylolites in our field site, which we calculated from the upper limit to fractality, is comparable to (though slightly larger than) our estimates of dissolution from two additional independent techniques, reflecting compactive strain of ~50%.
AB - Stylolites are rough surfaces that form by localized dissolution. Despite their abundance in carbonates and sandstones, and their importance for fluid flow and rock deformation, many fundamental issues concerning their structure and evolution are still unresolved. This manuscript studies the roughening of long parallel stylolites. Here we report measurements of stylolite surface roughness at a scale larger than ever measured before (10 -2-10 1m). Measurements were performed using ground-based-LIDAR on 6 naturally exposed surfaces of >km long stylolites in Northern Israel, producing a topographic map of the surfaces, from which roughness characteristics were derived. Our results show that for length scales below ~50cm, the stylolite morphology exhibits self-affine behavior, with a Hurst exponent H~0.65, consistent with previous studies made on smaller samples. The self-affine behavior changes for measurements made on scales above 50cm, with H decreasing almost to zero on long length scales. This observed upper-bound of self-affine roughness is measured here for the first time, but has been previously predicted by theory (Ebner et al., 2009b; Koehn et al., 2007). Our measurements support these theoretical models and together with them present a scenario in which the investigated stylolites evolve from preferential dissolution along an existing surface that was initially smooth and progressively roughened with time. Such a mechanism of stylolites growth is different from previously suggested mechanisms for other classes of stylolites, which might propagate sideways from an initial defect. Based on the theoretical roughening model that we adopted, the upper limit to fractality for this class of stylolites may be used as a measure of the amount of dissolution on stylolites. Indeed, the amount of dissolution on the stylolites in our field site, which we calculated from the upper limit to fractality, is comparable to (though slightly larger than) our estimates of dissolution from two additional independent techniques, reflecting compactive strain of ~50%.
KW - Family-Vicsek scaling
KW - LIDAR
KW - Porosity
KW - Pressure solution
KW - Stylolites
KW - Surface growth
KW - Surface roughening
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84862644608&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2012.05.026
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2012.05.026
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 337-338
SP - 186
EP - 196
JO - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
ER -