Scaling Relationships of Joint and Vein Arrays from The Burren, Co. Clare, Ireland



Gillespie, P.A.1, Walsh, J.J, Watterson, J., Bonson, C.G. & Manzocchi, T.
Present Address:
1 - Norsk Hydro ASA, Sandsliveien 90, N-5020 Bergen, Norway

Abstract - We present a study of the systematics of veins and joints in Carboniferous limestones of The Burren, Ireland. Scaling relationships were established for fracture arrays mapped from low elevation aerial photographs that image fractures on numerous limestone pavements for areas up to ca 1 km2. The veins and joints occur in the same sequence, but have contrasting scaling properties. The veins strike north-south and cut many beds to form vertically persistent, non-stratabound arrays. They are strongly clustered and have scale invariant geometric properties. Vein geometries suggest they grew sub-critically under relatively high differential stresses, during north-south directed Variscan compression. The joints form stratabound arrays, with regular spacings that scale with bed thickness. They show greater strike variation than the veins and have lognormal length distributions. The joints formed during uplift, under conditions low-differential stress conditions. The contrasting scaling properties of the joints and veins are attributed to different overburden stresses at the time of formation. The veins formed at greater depths than the joints, in conditions that favoured fracture propagation across mechanical discontinuities, resulting in the development of non-stratabound scaling properties.


Journal of Structural Geology, 23, 183-201, 2001.