NEW GEOLOGIC MAPPING RECORDS LATE MIOCENE TECTONIC DEFORMATION IN NORTHERN HARNEY BASIN, OREGON

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. Houston ◽  
◽  
Jason D. McClaughry
Drones ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 57
Author(s):  
Caroline Behrman ◽  
Roy Van Arsdale ◽  
Youngsang Kwon ◽  
Kerry Stockslager ◽  
Dave Leverett ◽  
...  

Aerial drone photography of an active pit within a sand and gravel quarry in DeSoto County, Mississippi, was conducted to better understand the Upland Complex, which is a high-level Pliocene terrace of the Mississippi River. The Upland Complex is of great interest economically, as it is the primary source of sand and gravel for Memphis, Tennessee and the surrounding region. The pit dimensions were approximately 820 ft (250 m) by 655 ft (200 m) and 79-ft (24 m) deep upon completion of the mining. Eight 3-D models of the pit were made at different times to illustrate the mining progression. Oblique and horizontal stereo aerial photography of the highwalls was conducted to produce 3-D models and high-resolution photomosaics of the highwalls for geologic mapping and interpretation. The mapped highwall geology included Pliocene Mississippi River bars consisting of sand, sand and gravel, and gravel ranging in thickness from 2 ft (0.6 m) to 32.8 ft (10 m), with variable cross-bed dip directions suggesting a meandering river environment of deposition. Pleistocene loess overlies the Pliocene sediment. The highwalls also revealed northerly-striking late Pliocene or Pleistocene tectonic folding, faulting, and probable earthquake liquefaction in northwestern Mississippi, where no Pliocene or Quaternary tectonic deformation had previously been reported. This study demonstrated Drone aerial photography as a quick, low cost, and safe means to study poorly accessible open-pit mining and to help understand the geology of the lower Mississippi River Valley.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Herwegh ◽  
Alfons Berger ◽  
Edi Kissling ◽  
Nicolas Bellahsen ◽  
Yann Rolland

<p>Late stage Alpine collision is the result of collision of the European and Adriatic continental plates. For this stage, particularly the External Crystalline Massifs (ECM) and their forelands provide information on deformation style/kinematics, exhumation history and geodynamic driving forces. Using the ECMs as marker for the non-thinned European passive continental margin, the margin’s paleogeography with its curved geometries controls in parts later compressional tectonics. During closure of the Valaisan in Eocene times, a major NW-SE trending sinistral transfer zone must have acted as lateral ramp between the NNW migrating Penninic front and the westerly situated European margin units (Argentera and Maritime Alps, stage 1 of Schmid et al. 2017). Hence, first transpressive movements were documented by transpressional strike-slip faults in the case of Argentera and southern Belledonne s.l. Massifs. The SW-NE trending ECMs became affected during a first stage of horizontal tectonics in Oligocene, when first the margin sediments were scrapped off their substratum (Helvetics, Chaînes Subalpines, Dauphinois) followed by thick-skinned thrusting. Transport directions gradually changed from W to N from the Western towards the Eastern ECMs. This spread in transport direction is the consequence of an Alp-internal vertical uplift (Internal Crystalline Massifs (ICM), Lepontine dome) induced by indentation of Adriatic mantle into European lithosphere (stage 2 of Schmid et al. 2017). With further down-bending of the European crust, a major change to a vertical tectonic deformation style occurred in Mid to Late Miocene. Steep reverse faults in the ECMs, in parts with oblique slip components (Mont Blanc), witness this stage with its enhanced vertical rock uplift component. The latter is most pronounced in the Aar Massif and gradually decreases towards the West (Belledonne s.l.). With continuous ICM exhumation in Late Miocene, deformation style switches again to horizontal tectonics, leading to ‘en bloc’ exhumation above basement thrusts of all massifs (Belledonne to Aar Massifs). Progressive shortening induced thrust propagation into the foreland sediments as well as the Jura mountains. In the case of the Argentera Massif, oroclinal bending probably led to a substantial anticlockwise rotation, which goes in hand with the rotation of the entire SW Alpine arc (stage 3 of Schmid et al. 2017). In a geodynamic context, the ‘Adriatic push model’ could explain aforementioned stages of classical horizontal tectonics. Not so, however, the observed severe components of vertical tectonics in the case of ECMs. Here, lower crustal delamination, with a loss of lithospheric negatively buoyant forcing and consequent strong increase in positive buoyancy explains generation and activity of steep reverse faulting in the ECMs. In this context, the ‘orogeny slab rollback’ model provides a physically more consistent framework to explain the observed deformation sequences of late-stage continent-continent collision.</p><p>Schmid, S.M., Kissling, E., Diehl, T., van Hinsbergen, D.J., Molli, G., 2017. Ivrea mantle wedge, arc of the Western Alps, and kinematic evolution of the Alps–Apennines orogenic system. Swiss Journal of Geosciences 110, 581-612.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 133 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 149-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weitao Wang ◽  
Peizhen Zhang ◽  
Zhicai Wang ◽  
Kang Liu ◽  
Hongyan Xu ◽  
...  

Abstract To help understand the relationship between global cooling and Tibetan uplift in the middle to late Miocene, multiple proxy data including carbonate stable isotope records, magnetic susceptibility, and sediment color references were obtained from a magnetostratigraphic section (14.5–6.0 Ma) of the Wushan Basin along the northeastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau. New proxies identify two phase changes that may have been controlled by global cooling and tectonic deformation at this time. During 14.5–13.2 Ma, positive shifts of ∼2.0‰ in δ18O and δ13C, an increase in lightness (L*), and a decrease in redness (a*) suggest gradually increasing aridity. Relatively high δ18O and δ13C values and low a*/L* and magnetic susceptibility values continue until ca. 10 Ma, when δ18O and δ13C significantly decrease and redness as well as magnetic susceptibility significantly increase. The negative shifts in δ18O and δ13C and increases in redness and magnetic susceptibility at 10 Ma are consistent with coeval basin environment and provenance changes. Combining these data with basin analysis, we suggest that global cooling was the dominant factor and Tibetan uplift was the subordinate factor for the middle Miocene aridification of the Wushan Basin. In contrast, the contribution of Tibetan uplift was dominant and global climate change was subordinate in the late Miocene basin paleogeographic reorganization.


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