THE INFLUENCE OF DUCTILE STRUCTURE AND RHEOLOGICAL HETEROGENEITY ON BRITTLE STRUCTURES AS EXHIBITED BY AVALONIAN GRANITES IN SOUTHEASTERN MASSACHUSETTS
Regionally pervasive subvertical northeast-, north-south-, and east-west-trending fracture sets are dominant in otherwise undeformed portions of the granites.
The above regional joint sets rotate into parallelism with lithologic and structural heterogeneities such as diabase dikes, shear zones, or xenoliths. Such features commonly have local joint sets parallel to them.
Where the granites display a strongly developed fabric, the dominant joint sets are parallel and orthogonal to foliation and perpendicular to a pervasive northeast plunging lineation.
Nearly all fractures observed that are not parallel to foliation, or part of the regional joint sets mentioned above, are either parallel or perpendicular to the regional lineation.
The behavior of these fractures in relation to ductile structure have implications for rheological constraints on tectonic models of the post-Alleghenian core of the New England Appalachians, hydrogeologic models of regional fractured bedrock aquifers, and the interpretation of topographic lineaments.