Transient creep by long-range dislocation interactions in subduction
zones
- David Wallis
, - Mike Sep,
- Lars Hansen

David Wallis

University of Cambridge
Corresponding Author:dw584@cam.ac.uk
Author ProfileAbstract
Large earthquakes transfer stress from the shallow lithosphere to the
underlying viscoelastic lower crust and upper mantle, inducing transient
creep during the postseismic interval. Recent experiments on olivine
have provided a new rheological model for this transient creep based on
accumulation and release of back stresses among dislocations. Here, we
test whether natural rocks preserve dislocation-induced stress
heterogeneity consistent with the back-stress hypothesis by mapping
olivine from the palaeosubduction interface of the Oman-UAE ophiolite
with high-angular resolution electron backscatter diffraction. The
olivine preserves heterogeneous residual stresses that vary in magnitude
by several hundred megapascals over length scales of a few micrometres.
Large stresses are commonly spatially associated with elevated densities
of geometrically necessary dislocations within subgrain interiors. These
spatial relationships, along with characteristic probability
distributions of the stresses, confirm that the stress heterogeneity is
generated by the dislocations and records their long-range elastic
interactions. Images of dislocations decorated by oxidation display
bands of high and low dislocation density, suggesting that dislocation
interactions contributed to organisation of the substructure. These
results support the applicability of the back-stress model of transient
creep to deformation in the mantle portion of plate-boundary shear
zones. The model predicts that rapid stress changes, such as those
imposed by large earthquakes, can induce order-of-magnitude changes in
viscosity that depend nonlinearly on the stress change, consistent with
inferences of mantle rheology from geodetic observations.