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Fold-thrust belts Goonyella coal mine, Australia, courtesy Steve Marshak/Scott Wilkerson Canadian Foothills and Front Ranges •Thrust faults are low-angle and can have substantial displacement, stack above each other •Faults tend to cut upsection toward craton, flattening at intermediate levels (e.g. shales) •Low structural relief in external zones •Older rocks (higher structural relief) typically uplifted in internal zones •Many faults are folded above underlying folds •Backthrust/triangle zone at E terminus •Overall system is wedge-shaped above gentle basement dip toward hinterland Fault Related Folds Fault Bend Folds Fault Propagation Folds Includes Trishear Folds Decollement Buckle Folds Flat-ramp-flat geometry for fault surface Fault Bend Folds Fault surface exists across entire cross-section Fold develops above ramp where limb angles related to fault dip Fault-Propagation Folds Fault tip propagates thru crosssection Fold develops above ramp with uniform forelimb angles Active axial surface Original FPP has forelimb with same dip, trishear dips flatten upwards (trishear = reality) Passive axial surface Displacement Migration of particles Mechanical Stratigraphy Competent layers •Carbonates, sandstones, basement •Strong, stiff •Tend to maintain layer thickness •Ramps form across these •Tend to fault before folding Incompetent layers •Shales, evaporites •Weak, ductile •Can “flow” into or out of fold hinges •Detachments (“flats”) localize in these •Tend to fold before faulting Duplexes Roof thrust Floor thrust Earth Sciences Dept., University of Leeds Sawtooth Range, MT “Shingled” imbricate fan of Paleozoic carbonates Displacement transfer, tear faults and lateral ramps (after Dahlstrom, 1970) Does displacement of individual sheets change along strike? Yes No Map Patterns in Thrust Belts 1. Sinuous traces reflect folded thrusts (Fermor, GSAB 1999) 2 2. Branches reflect merging of faults 3 1 3. Oldest rocks in center of hanging wall 4. Units that commonly occur adjacent to faults are detachment levels 5. Plunge allows maps to be viewed like cross-sections 6. High-angle “tear faults” occur in some belts but origins/kinematics can be difficult to establish 4 5 Foreland basins FTB’s create topographic loads that flex the lithosphere “An elongate region of potential sediment accommodation that forms on continental crust between a contractional orogenic belt and the adjacent craton, mainly in response to… subduction and …the resulting fold-thrust belt.” DeCelles and Giles (1996) DeCelles and Giles, 1996, Basin Research Wedge-top depozone: •Coarse-grained alluvial and fan-delta deposits with well-developed growth structures •Is part of the orogenic wedge Foredeep depozone: •Increased sediment accommodation; wedgeshaped package; ~continuous deposition, fine- to coarse-grained Forebulge depozone: •Decreased sediment accommodation; unconformities, (poss. major, >10Ma) condensed sections Back-bulge depozone •Sediments may be derived from both the orogenic wedge and the craton; typically finegrained, multiple regional unconformities