scholarly journals Oblique convergence and strain partitioning in the outer deformation front of NE Himalaya

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dibyashakti Panda ◽  
Bhaskar Kundu ◽  
M. Santosh
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Patrick Hooks

<span style="font-size: 10.5pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt; mso-fareast-font-family: 宋体; mso-font-kerning: 1.0pt; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: ZH-CN; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA;" lang="EN-US">Three-dimensional thermo-mechanical numerical simulations of the ongoing Yakutat–North America collision are used to identify the role of surface processes in triggering localized rapid uplift, exhumation, and strain observed within the St. Elias orogen of southern Alaska. Thermochronological data reveal localized rapid exhumation associated with the Seward-Malaspina and Hubbard Glaciers within a tectonic corner structure where transpressional motion to the south along the Fairweather Fault system transitions to shortening to the north and west within the active fold-and-thrust belt of the St. Elias orogen. The modeled deformation patterns are characteristic of oblique convergence within a tectonic corner, recording the transition from simple shear to contractional strain within a zone spatially consistent with the highest exhumation rates suggesting the corner geometry is the primary control of strain partitioning.</span><span style="font-size: 10.5pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt; mso-fareast-font-family: 宋体; mso-font-kerning: 1.0pt; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: ZH-CN; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA;" lang="EN-US">The relative roles of surface-related processes versus tectonics-related processes in the development of this pattern of deformation were tested with the inclusion of an erosional surface model. The presence of surface processes enhanced the uplift and development of a localized rapid exhumation. When spatially and temporally erosion models are employed, the location of maxima is shifted in response. This indicates that efficient erosion, and resultant deposition and material advection can influence the localization of strain and uplift.</span>


Solid Earth ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 857-872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irene Pérez-Cáceres ◽  
José Fernando Simancas ◽  
David Martínez Poyatos ◽  
Antonio Azor ◽  
Francisco González Lodeiro

Abstract. Different transpressional scenarios have been proposed to relate kinematics and complex deformation patterns. We apply the most suitable of them to the Variscan orogeny in SW Iberia, which is characterized by a number of successive left-lateral transpressional structures developed in the Devonian to Carboniferous period. These structures resulted from the oblique convergence between three continental terranes (Central Iberian Zone, Ossa-Morena Zone and South Portuguese Zone), whose amalgamation gave way to both intense shearing at the suture-like contacts and transpressional deformation of the continental pieces in-between, thus showing strain partitioning in space and time. We have quantified the kinematics of the collisional convergence by using the available data on folding, shearing and faulting patterns, as well as tectonic fabrics and finite strain measurements. Given the uncertainties regarding the data and the boundary conditions modeled, our results must be considered as a semi-quantitative approximation to the issue, though very significant from a regional point of view. The total collisional convergence surpasses 1000 km, most of them corresponding to left-lateral displacement parallel to terrane boundaries. The average vector of convergence is oriented E–W (present-day coordinates), thus reasserting the left-lateral oblique collision in SW Iberia, in contrast with the dextral component that prevailed elsewhere in the Variscan orogen. This particular kinematics of SW Iberia is understood in the context of an Avalonian plate salient currently represented by the South Portuguese Zone.


2019 ◽  
Vol 158 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques Malavieille ◽  
Stephane Dominguez ◽  
Chia-Yu Lu ◽  
Chih-Tung Chen ◽  
Elena Konstantinovskaya

AbstractMany orogens on the planet result from plate convergence involving subduction of a continental margin. The lithosphere is strongly deformed during mountain building involving subduction of a plate composed generally of accreted continental margin units and some fragments of downgoing oceanic crust and mantle. A complex deformation involving strong partitioning of deformation modes and kinematics produces crustal shortening, accompanied by crustal thickening. Partitioning depends on three main factors: (1) rheologic layering of the lithosphere; (2) interaction between tectonics and surface processes; (3) subduction kinematics and 3D geometry of continental margins (oblique convergence, shape of indenters). Here we present an original view and discussion on the impact of deformation partitioning on the structure and evolution of orogens by examining the Taiwan mountain belt as a case study. Major unsolved questions are addressed through geological observations from the Taiwan orogen and insights from analogue models integrating surface processes. Some of these questions include: What is the role played by décollements or weak zones in crustal deformation and what is the impact of structural heterogeneities inherited from the early extensional history of a rifted passive continental margin? What is the relationship between deep underplating, induced uplift and flow of crustal material during erosion (finite strain evolution during wedge growth)? Are syn-convergent normal faults an effect of deformation partitioning and erosion? What is the role of strain partitioning on the location of major seismogenic faults in active mountain belts? What can be learned about the long-term and the present-day evolution of Taiwan?


2019 ◽  
pp. 5-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Konstantinovskaya ◽  
Gennady Ivanov ◽  
Jean-Louis Feybesse ◽  
Jean-Luc Lescuyer

The west-verging fold and thrust belt of the Central Labrador Trough originated as a part of the New Quebec Orogen from rift inversion as a result of oblique collision and dextral transpression between the Archean Superior craton and the Archean block of the Core Zone during the Trans-Hudson orogeny (1.82−1.77 Ga). The structures associated with dextral transpression are well established in the northern segment of the orogen but not in the central part. We present new field structural observations along the ca. 70 km long W−E Minowean-Romanet transect that include not only elements of thrust tectonics but also previously undocumented examples of strike-slip shear zones and late brittle, semi-brittle and ductile extensional structures which occurred both in the frontal and rear parts of the thrust wedge. The newly described low-angle mineral lineation, axes of cylindrical folds and dextral mylonitic shear zones in the footwall of the Romanet Fault are oriented subparallel to the orogen and reflect the early phase of oblique convergence. Mineral lineations and striations on planes of normal faults in the hanging wall of the Romanet Fault are oriented orthogonal to the orogen and correspond to a later phase of exhumation driven by the combined effects of erosion and underplating. To explain the increase in the degree of exhumation along the orogen in the study area from NW to SE, we propose a model of strain partitioning and differential exhumation that resulted from longitudinal variations of shortening and erosion under an oblique convergence setting.RÉSUMÉLa partie centrale de la ceinture de plissement et de chevauchement de la Fosse du Labrador de vergence vers l’ouest fait partie intégrante de l’Orogène du Nouveau-Québec, et résulte de la collision oblique avec transpression dextre entre le craton Supérieur archéen et le bloc archéen de la Zone noyau pendant l’Orogenèse trans-hudsonienne (1.82−1.77 Ga). Les structures associées à la transpression dextre sont bien établies dans la partie nord de l’orogène mais pas dans la partie centrale. Nous présentons de nouvelles observations structurales de terrain le long de la traverse ouest−est Minowean-Romanet d’environ 70 km de long, qui comprennent non seulement des évidences de tectonique de chevauchement, mais également des exemples encore non documentés de zones de cisaillement ductile et de structures d’extension fragiles, demi-fragiles et ductiles à la fois dans les parties frontales et arrière du prisme d’accrétion tectonique. La linéation minérale à faible plongement récemment décrite, les axes de plis cylindriques et les zones de cisaillement mylonitique dextre dans le compartiment inférieur de la faille de Romanet sont subparallèles à l’orogène et reflètent une phase précoce de la convergence oblique. La linéation et les stries minérales sur les plans des failles normales dans le compartiment supérieur de la faille de Romanet sont orientées orthogonalement à l’orogène et correspondent à la phase ultérieure d’exhumation induite par les effets combinés de l’érosion et de l’accrétion basale. Pour expliquer l’augmentation du degré d’exhumation le long de l’orogène du nord-ouest au sud-est dans la zone d’étude, nous proposons un modèle de partitionnement de la déformation et de l’exhumation différentielle résultant des variations longitudinales du raccourcissement et de l’érosion dans un contexte de convergence oblique.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 3773-3815 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Pérez-Cáceres ◽  
J. F. Simancas ◽  
D. Martínez Poyatos ◽  
A. Azor ◽  
F. González Lodeiro

Abstract. Different transpressional scenarios have been proposed to relate kinematics and complex deformation patterns. We apply the most suitable of them to the Variscan orogeny in SW Iberia, which is characterized by a number of successive left-lateral transpressional structures developed at Devonian to Carboniferous times. These structures resulted from the oblique convergence between three continental terranes (Central Iberian Zone, Ossa-Morena Zone and South Portuguese Zone), whose amalgamation gave way to both intense shearing at the suture-like contacts and transpressional deformation of the continental pieces in-between, thus showing strain partitioning in space and time. We have quantified the kinematics of the collisional convergence by using the available data on folding, shearing and faulting patterns, as well as tectonic fabrics and finite strain measurements. Given the uncertainties regarding the data and the boundary conditions modeled, our results must be considered as a semi-quantitative approximation to the issue, though very significant from a regional point of view. The total collisional convergence surpasses 1000 km, most of them corresponding to left-lateral displacement parallel to terrane boundaries. The average vector of convergence is oriented E–W (present-day coordinates), thus reasserting the left-lateral oblique collision in SW Iberia, in contrast with the dextral component that prevailed elsewhere in the Variscan orogen. This particular kinematics of SW Iberia is understood in the context of an Avalonian plate promontory currently represented by the South Portuguese Zone.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Díaz-Azpiroz ◽  
Inmaculada Expósito ◽  
Alejandro Jiménez-Bonilla ◽  
Juan Carlos Balanyá

&lt;p&gt;Displacement between tectonic plates is normally partitioned into different tectonic domains accommodating specific components of the bulk strain, such that no single domain can possibly be regarded as representative of the overall kinematics. Eventually, this partitioning can be produced at different scales. Therefore, plate kinematic motion estimations based on the surface geological record should ideally rely on detailed multiscale, structural analyses of all different tectonic domains involved.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The Betic-Rif orogen was formed during the Cenozoic by the convergence and subsequent collision of the Alboran domain and the South Iberian and Maghrebian paleomargins. After the main Miocene event, oblique convergence has been still active up to present times in both branches of the resulting Gibraltar Arc. In this work we analyze how dextral oblique convergence in the northern Betic branch is partitioned into different tectonic domains of the orogen external zones and foreland, where contrasting strain fields are deduced. These domains present distinctive rheologies, thus showing also specific structural styles. As such, we present data of upper Miocene-Present structures from four different tectonic domains along a complete transect of the western Betics (southern Spain), from the internal-external zones boundary outwards. In the inner fold and thrust belt, the detached South Iberian paleomargin and Flysch trough units (mostly limestones and other carbonatic rocks) are deformed mainly by upright and double-verging folds as well as reverse faults, both registering mostly orthogonal shortening. The outer fold and thrust belt progressed toward the foreland incorporating block-in-matrix formations, with evaporite-rich marly matrix, formed ahead the mountain front; its main deformation is resolved at a strike-slip dominated, dextral transpressional zone. The upper Miocene deposits of the foreland basin (calcarenites and marls) are affected by weak deformation combining some shortening and an unconstrained strike-slip component, as deduced from seismic profiles. Finally, Paleozoic structures of the foreland, formerly developed at non- to medium-grade metamorphic conditions, were likely reactivated under a dextral transpressional strain field, which acts in combination with forebulge bending.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The strongly arcuate shape of the Gibraltar Arc likely imposes contrasting kinematics along strike within the same tectonic domain. Indeed, the inner fold and thrust belt shows nearly orthogonal shortening to the west, in a more frontal position, and a strike-slip dominated high-strain zone (the so-called Torcal shear zone) to the east. By contrast, preliminary studies show no significant differences in the kinematics of the foreland eastward from the analyzed transect.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;All of our kinematic results from the studied domains are compatible with an overall dextral oblique convergence. However, more accurate strain estimations are needed to constrain the plate displacements responsible for the upper Miocene-Recent deformation in the Gibraltar Arc northern branch. Moreover, detailed analyses of strain partitioning modes will shed light into the relationships between these plate displacements and the resulting strain patterns.&lt;/p&gt;


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