* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Structure of the Lithosphere and the Sedimentary Record: Where do
Mantle plume wikipedia , lookup
Yilgarn Craton wikipedia , lookup
Geology of the Pyrenees wikipedia , lookup
Baltic Shield wikipedia , lookup
Great Lakes tectonic zone wikipedia , lookup
Supercontinent wikipedia , lookup
Post-glacial rebound wikipedia , lookup
Oceanic trench wikipedia , lookup
Abyssal plain wikipedia , lookup
Large igneous province wikipedia , lookup
Cimmeria (continent) wikipedia , lookup
Structure of the Lithosphere and the Sedimentary Record: Where do they Meet? Michelle Kominz Western Michigan University Overview • Original Earthscope Goals and how they relate to the sedimentary record. • Overview of basins: What aspects of the stratigraphic record relate to Earthscope scope. • Tectonic Subsidence analysis • Basin subsidence - overview of observations • Several examples • Several targets Earthscope 1 • What is a continent? • How are continental structure and deformation related? • How does crust and mantle rheology vary with with depth? • Lithospheric Strength and Crust-Mantle Coupling. • How and where are forces generated in the upper mantle, and how and where are they transferred to the crust? • How and where are forces generated in the upper mantle, and how and where are they transferred to the crust? • The stratigraphic record tells us when and how the crust experienced deformation. Strata Inform Earthscope: • Foreland basins • Forearc/Backarc basins • Passive margins • Cratonic basins • Pull-apart (trans-tensional) basins • How does crust and mantle • Stratigraphic models require an understanding of rheology vary with with depth? the lithospheric structure and rheology. Earthscope Informs Strata: • Foreland basins • Forearc/Backarc basins • Passive margins • Cratonic basins • Pull-apart (trans-tensional) basins Basins: Fig. modified from Reynolds et al. 1991 Distance (km) 0 50 100 Sediment Supply 150 200 Eustatic Sea Level 0 Depth (m) 500 Tectonic Subsidence The 3 main controls on sedimentation are generally taken to be: Eustasy, Sediment Supply and Tectonic Subsidence. Basins: Fig. modified from Reynolds et al. 1991 Distance (km) 0 50 100 150 Sediment Supply Eustatic Sea Level 0 Depth (m) Compaction 500 Tectonic Subsidence Isostasy 200 Sediment Dynamics Crustal thickness and strength is crucial for both forward and inverse stratigraphic modeling: • Flexural strength - 2D models are dependent on strength of lithosphere Isostasy • Thermal models • hydrocarbon maturation Tectonic Subsidence • subsidence history • Model testing - e.g., magmatic vs. amagmatic extensional basins Basins: • Foreland basins • Forearc/Backarc basins • Passive margins • Cratonic basins • Pull-apart (trans-tensional) basins Basins Porosity (%) 0 20 40 60 80 0 Tectonic Subsidence Analysis Backstripping: 1 2 3 Measured Section T5 T4 T3 T2 T1 T0 Observed Sediment Thickness T1 Decompacted Sediment Thickness, S* T1 4 T1 5 T0 T0 T2 First Reduction R1 T0 T2 6 T2 T 0 Depth paleowaterdepth equivalent basin for sediment thickness S* T 1 R1 Theoretical Thermal Subsidence T 2 T 3 T 4 T 5 Passive Margins: 1 6 7 5 8 2 3 1 4 6 8 1 Paleozoic Miogeocline Southern Canadian Rocky Mountains 8 6 U.S. Atlanntic margin. U.S. cordilleran Miogeocline Passive Margins: R1 Subsidence (m) 0 120 100 200 100 300 200 400 300 500 400 600 500 700 600 800 700 100 80 Time (Ma) 60 low φ high φ 40 20 0 Ancora Bass River low φ high φ Van Sickel et al., 2004 Basin Research 2 Basins 7 3 6 Foreland basins: 5 4 1 8 1 2 3 2 3 4 5 Southern Alberta Basin San Rafael Swell, Utah 6 8 7 6 Hoback Basin, Wyoming 7 Green River Basin, Wyoming Basins Forearc Basins: 7 1,2 3 5 9 8 6 4 3 1 1 Great Valley 2 2 3 Sacramento Basin Peninsular Ranges 7 7Oregon Coast Range 8 Cratonic Basins: 3,4 7 2 5 6 1 8 1 2 3 4 1 Illinois Basin 3 Willison Basin, North Dakota 2 Michigan Basin 4 Willison Basin, Saskatchewan 8 Passive Margins - Kirschner et al. • Passive margins form where continents rift and form new ocean basins Block Diagram, Extension: All Continents All Oceans Stretched Continental Crust z z/β wβ w When newly stretched margin displaces ocean, the area of the oceans decreases and sea level rises. Funck et al., 2003 Blue = Kominz & Scotese, 2005 Red = Data from Steckler & Watts, 1978 Sediment thickness data from Divins, 2006 • Assume sediment grain density = 2.7 g/cm3 • Use porosity vs depth curves to obtain the bulk density • Blue is Oceanic Sed. (z<1000m & WD > 2000m) • Red is Marginal Sed. • Use Airy isostatic model to remove the sediment Bathymetry data from U.S. Department of Commerce, 2006, after Smith & Sandwell, 1997 Calculating Extension Total tectonic subsidence = TTS Modified from Ziegler & Cloetingh, 2004 • Fit a subsidence curve and determine β ßmodel is the stretching factor using the breakup age and TTS required to thin crust at sea level, to • We assume rifting proceeds via a its current thickness modified uniform extension model (β = δ) • We calculate ß twice using different physical parameters – Parsons and Sclater (1977) – Stein and Stein (1992) • Preferred model – Different Teq and ß Crustal Thickness • • One output from the model is an estimate of the crustal thickness of the stretched continental margin. There is very little data available for comparison • Testing the Model • • Good general correlation with seismic crustal thickness data from the margins of North America & Australia On average our model overestimates crustal thickness, and thus underestimates extension Sources: Diebold et al., 1988; Perry et al., 2002; Funck et al., 2003; Brown et al., 2003 Crustal Thickness Kirschner et al. submitted, Tectonics According to Kirschner et al.’s model results, thinned continental crust extends beneath the non-marine continent from Long Island through the Delmarva Peninsula. This region has been extensively studied and provides some interesting questions. Backstripping Sea Level: T1 T5 T4 Decompacted Sediment Thickness, S* First Reduction R1 T1 60 80 1 2 T1 3 T0 T0 T0 T2 T2 5 6 T2 T1 paleowaterdepth equivalent basin for sediment thickness S* T0 Depth 40 4 T3 T2 T 0 20 0 Observed Sediment Thickness Measured Section Porosity (%) 0 T 1 R1 Theoretical Thermal Subsidence T 2 T 3 T 4 T 5 Sea Level Change & Non-Thermal Tectonics Height T0 T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 Sea Level Kominz et al. 2008 Sea level estimates from backstripping 11 coastal plain boreholes from New Jersey and Delaware. Eustatic estimates are significantly lower than those of Haq et al. (1987) but also diverge during the Late Cretaceous and Paleocene from estimates based on ridge and ocean volumes of Müller et al., (2008). Due to passage of N.J. over the subducted Farallon slab beginning ≈ 50 Ma? Epeirogeny Kominz et al. 2008 Sea level estimates from backstripping 11 coastal plain boreholes from New Jersey and Delaware. Eustatic estimates are significantly lower than those of Haq et al. (1987) but also diverge during the Late Cretaceous and Paleocene from estimates based on ridge and ocean volumes of Müller et al., (2008). Due (in part) to passage of N.J. over the subducted Farallon slab beginning ≈ 50 Ma? Spasojevic et al., (2009), Müller et al., (2008). Details - Recent Hayden et al., 2008, Kulpecz et al., in prep. The regional R2 pattern of the MD, VA, Delaware portions of the Salisbury Embayment is quite different from N.J. and requires several tectonic events, including a long-term subsidence event in the mid to Late Miocene. The center of the Eocene impact crater is showing the opposite sense of motion, suggesting an in-plane stress event. Besides the subducted Farallon slab are there fundamental crustal differences between N.J. and MD/VA? Impact Event Hayden et al., 2008, Kulpecz et al., in prep. All crater-interior cores show slow uplift immediately after the impact event followed by an unconformity and rapid uplift after several million years. This is consistent with a model in which rapid sedimentation generates a negative thermal anomaly which temporarily offsets the positive, crustal, thermal anomaly generated by the impact event. Imaging the structure of crust beneath the crater would go a long way to resolving issues of the effect of an impactor on the crust and on subsequent tectonics. Cratonic Basins: 3,4 7 2 5 6 1 8 1 2 3 4 1 Illinois Basin 3 Willison Basin, North Dakota 2 Michigan Basin 4 Willison Basin, Saskatchewan 8 Cratonic Basins Backstripping of many wells within the basin reveals variations in the pattern of subsidence through time. Central gravity high Precambrian rift Cratonic Basins Model for Michigan Basin formation: emplacement of excess mass followed by stress-induced crustal weakening. Can you image the anomalous mass? Might the strain-weakening generate observable anisotropy? Central gravity high Precambrian rift Targets: • Foreland basins • Forearc/Backarc basins Passive margins • P assive margins Cratonic basins • C ratonic basins • Pull-apart (trans-tensional) basins Structure of the Lithosphere and the Sedimentary Record: Where do they Meet? Michelle Kominz Western Michigan University Thank you