Kinematic indicators for regional dextral shear along the Norumbega fault system in the Casco Bay area, coastal Maine

Author(s):  
Mark T. Swanson
2019 ◽  
Vol 131 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 2039-2055 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elana L. Leithold ◽  
Karl W. Wegmann ◽  
Delwayne R. Bohnenstiehl ◽  
Catelyn N. Joyner ◽  
Audrianna F. Pollen

Abstract Lake Crescent, a 180-m-deep, glacially carved lake located on the Olympic Peninsula in western Washington, USA, overlies the Lake Creek-Boundary Creek fault zone, a system of structures with at least 56 km of late Pleistocene to Holocene surface rupture. Investigation of the lake’s sediment, including a reflection seismic survey and analysis of piston cores, reveals evidence that the fault beneath the lake has ruptured four times in the past ∼7200 years, producing unusually thick deposits termed megaturbidites. The earthquakes triggered rockslides that entered the lake and caused displacement waves (lake tsunamis) and seiches, most recently ca. 3.1 ka. Seismic reflection results from beneath the depth of core penetration reveal at least two older post-glacial ruptures that are likely to have similarly affected the lake. The stratigraphy of Lake Crescent provides insight into the behavior of a fault system that partially accommodates regional clockwise rotation and contraction of the northern Cascadia forearc through oblique dextral shear, and highlights the potential for disruption to critical infrastructure, transportation corridors, and industry on the North Olympic Peninsula during future surface-rupturing earthquakes. Our results illustrate the potential synergism between lacustrine paleoseismology and fault-scarp trench investigations. More precise dating of strong earthquake shaking afforded by continuous accumulation of lake sediment improves earthquake histories based on trenched fault scarp exposures, which are commonly poorly dated.


2009 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Neill ◽  
W. E. Stephens

SynopsisThe Cluanie Pluton is a late Caledonian granitoid emplaced into the Glenfinnan Division of the Moine Supergroup in the NW Scottish Highlands. A field investigation of the pluton and its internal facies is presented along with new major- and trace-element whole-rock XRF analyses, and geobarometric and geothermometric studies. Cluanie is predominantly composed of hornblende granodiorite characterized by varying concentrations of distinctive alkali feldspar megacrysts, with minor amounts of biotite granodiorite and rare mingled porphyritic microgranodiorite. The alkali feldspar megacrysts appear to be magmatic in origin. Rare spectacular pegmatitic concentrations most likely represent physical accumulation of the megacrysts. The pluton is geochemically a high Na/K trondhjemite, the only such pluton known among the Newer Granites of Scotland. On the basis of geochemical evidence and a comparison with partial melting experiments, we propose that the magmas were derived by fluid-rich melting of an amphibolitic source leading to relatively low temperature magmas which were significantly contaminated by Moine metasediments. The pluton was emplaced in the mid crust at about 4.3 kbar during an episode of dextral shear on the Glen Glass Fault related to regional strike-slip faulting on the Great Glen Fault system at c. 425 Ma.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajay Kumar ◽  
Soumyajit Mukherjee ◽  
Mohamedharoon A. Shaikh ◽  
Seema Singh

<p>The Morni hills located in the north-western Himalaya in Panchkula district, Haryana has undergone poly-phase deformation owing to its complex tectonic history. In order to better understand the kinematic evolution of study area, detailed structural analyses of the fault system at regional-scale is carried out. We perform paleostress analyses on the collected fault-slip data to derive the paleostress tensors. The fault-slip data includes attitudes of fault planes and slickenside lineations, and the sense of slip along the fault plane determined by observing various kinematic indicators. The study area mainly exposes compacted, fine- to medium-grained calcareous sandstones belonging to the lower Siwalik formation in the Himalayan foreland basin. The exposed sandstones contain numerous striated slip planes of varying slip-sense. As the fault planes are intra-formational and exposed in uniform lithology, sense of slip cannot be determined through offset markers. In such cases, the sense of slip of the fault plane is determined solely by observing various slickenside kinematic indicators and fracture types developed on the faulted surface. The slickenside kinematic indicators e.g., calcite mineral steps were found useful in deciphering the sense of movement of each of the slip plane. The paleostress inversion of fault-slip data was carried out by applying the open source software T-Tecto studio X5 to obtain the reduced stress tensor. The Paleostress inversion algorithm called the Right Dihedral Method (RDM) is executed to estimate the principal stress axes orientations. Temporally, the slip planes may have reactivated multiple times preserving multiple slickenside orientations superimposing one another. Such fault-slip data are called heterogeneous and therefore, multiple stress states are deduced to explain the heterogeneous fault-slip data. The paleostress analysis results indicate stress regime index (R’) range 1.25–2.25 and 0.20–1.00 suggesting pure strike-slip to transpressive and pure extensive to transtensive stress regime respectively prevailing in the study area.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ross Wagner ◽  
Alan Deino ◽  
Stephen W. Edwards ◽  
Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki ◽  
Elmira Wan

ABSTRACT The structure and stratigraphy of the Miocene formations east of San Francisco Bay have been described in multiple studies for over a century. We integrated the results of past investigations and provide new data that improve understanding of formation age, the timing of deformation, and the amount of dextral displacement on selected faults. New geologic mapping and better age control show that formations previously inferred to be separate units of different ages are correlative, and new names are proposed for these units. Miocene structures associated with the development of the San Andreas transform system exerted significant control on Miocene deposition in the East Bay area. The developing structure created five distinct stratigraphic sections that are differentiated on the basis of differences in the stratigraphic sequence, lithology, and age. The stratigraphic changes are attributed to significant dextral displacement, syndepositional faulting, and distal interfingering of sediment from tectonically elevated source areas. New stratigraphic evaluations and age control show that prior to ca. 6 Ma, the developing fault system created local tectonically induced uplift as well as spatially restricted subbasins. Regional folding did not occur until after 6 Ma. Past evaluations have inferred significant dextral displacement on some of the faults in the East Bay. The spatial relationships between unique conglomerate clasts and known source areas, as well as the distribution of well-dated and unique tuffs, suggest that dextral displacement on some faults in the East Bay is less than previously reported.


2013 ◽  
Vol 151 (5) ◽  
pp. 899-915 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. KOCKS ◽  
R. A. STRACHAN ◽  
J. A. EVANS ◽  
M. FOWLER

AbstractThe Rogart igneous complex is unique within the northern Scottish Caledonides because it comprises an apparent continuum of magma types that records a progressive change in emplacement mechanisms related to large-scale tectonic controls. Syn-D2 leucogranites and late-D2 quartz monzodiorites were emplaced during crustal thickening and focused within the broad zone of ductile deformation associated with the Naver Thrust. In contrast, emplacement of the post-D2 composite central pluton was controlled by development of a steeply dipping dextral shear zone along the Loch Shin Line, interpreted as an anti-Riedel shear within the Great Glen Fault system. The mantle-derived nature of the late-to-post-D2 melts implies that the Naver Thrust and the Loch Shin Line were both crustal-scale structures along which magmas were channelled during deformation. A U–Pb zircon age of 425±1.5 Ma for the outer component of the central pluton provides an upper limit on regional deformation and metamorphism within host Moine rocks. These findings are consistent with the view that a fundamental change in tectonic regime occurred in the Scottish Caledonides at c. 425 Ma, corresponding to the switch from regional thrusting that resulted from the collision of Baltica and Laurentia, to the development of the orogen-parallel Great Glen Fault system.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (8) ◽  
pp. 1301-1308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghislain Tourigny ◽  
Francis Chartrand

Small-scale subvertical shear zones developed parallel to a regional preexisting S2 schistosity exhibit evidence of a complex shearing history recorded by conflicting kinematic indicators in both crosssection and plan view. The concordant schistosity internal to the shear zones contains a steeply plunging stretching lineation. Coexisting kinematic indicators of non-coaxial deformation parallel to this lineation are compatible with reverse dip-slip. This earliest shearing event was characterized by (1) the development of several shear discontinuities along selected preexisting S2 foliation surfaces, (2) subvertical transposition of both bedding and the oldest (S1) flat-lying foliation, and (3) by the emplacement of shear veins along the S2 foliation planes. The youngest shearing event reactivated the foliation-parallel shear discontinuities as dextral shear planes, thereby causing concomitant subhorizontal retransposition, east–west subhorizontal stretching, and emplacement of en echelon extension veins. A single set of shear bands occurring at a clockwise acute angle to the slipping foliation indicates that small-scale shear zones were transpressional during the late dextral shearing.


Author(s):  
F. Al-Kufaishi

Two localities (Al-Marij and Laik) were selected to investigate the type of Quartz Grains from crustal material formed by evaporation of waters discharged by springs in Hit area, western Iraq, Previous studies on the crustal material (1,2) showed that the water discharged by these springs are associated with Abu-Jir fault system which run parallel to the Euphrates river,Factor analyses of the crustal and soil materials (50 samples analysed for 16 variables)(2) showed five factors; the first factor includes SiO2, Al2O3 and TiO2 with positive factor loading, and CaO, L.O.I. with negative loading and hence lead to the conclusion that the distribution of these variables is a reflection of transported clay material.This study concentrates on the use of SEM to investigate the contribution of Quartz grains found in the crustal material on two selected sites.


Author(s):  
Sheigla Murphy ◽  
Paloma Sales ◽  
Micheline Duterte ◽  
Camille Jacinto

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