Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4733930 Journal of Structural Geology 2007 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

Multilayer folding models provide a framework for evaluating fold kinematics, but have limited applicability for tight folds. A careful analysis of the tight Canyon Range (CR) syncline, a natural, multilayer fold (of alternating competent quartzite and incompetent argillite layers) formed in the elastico-frictional regime, yielded the following results. (1) Fracturing and cataclastic flow occurred at multiple scales. Variations in deformation style across scales are a function of matrix-controlled versus block-controlled cataclastic flow. (2) Competent and incompetent layers switched roles in controlling fold geometry between ∼40° and ∼60° limb dips; models predict this switch at 60°. (3) Parasitic folds formed during later stages of fold-tightening, while most models assume that they form during early stages of folding. (4) During fold-tightening, layer-parallel shortening structures were reoriented to accommodate vertical extension.We use multilayer folding models for initial first-order analysis of the CR syncline's kinematic history. Some of our data stray from model predictions. We use the location and timing of these variations to explain how/why the fold differs from anticipated results; this suggests critical details that may be overlooked and/or oversimplified in established folding models. Thus, kinematic details unraveled from the CR syncline improve our understanding of general multilayer fold models.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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