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Announcements Field trip this Saturday to Collosal Cave area 7:30 AM at loading dock. We will map some really cool stuff! Please review map symbols and.

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Presentation on theme: "Announcements Field trip this Saturday to Collosal Cave area 7:30 AM at loading dock. We will map some really cool stuff! Please review map symbols and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Announcements Field trip this Saturday to Collosal Cave area 7:30 AM at loading dock. We will map some really cool stuff! Please review map symbols and bring stereonets. We may return after sunset. Next week: Mihai Ducea will lecture on normal fault systems. Please read D&R pp.340-357 Nov. 13 - Draft #1 of fault paper due!

2 What is it? (Quiz) (1) (2) (4) (3)

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4 Colorado Plateau monoclines may be related to thick-skinned deformation

5 Today: Mechanics of Thrust Systems (1) Mechanical "paradox" of moving large thrust sheets (2) Thrust belt evolution: Critical Taper theory (3) Foreland basins (4) Fault project

6 “mechanical paradox” of thrusting - why such thin sheets (e.g. 100 km long/2-3 km thick) can remain intact during faulting?

7 Recall Byerlee's Law Question: How much shear stress is needed to cause movement along a preexisting fracture surface, subjected to a certain normal stress?  c = tan  (  N ), where tan  is the coefficient of sliding friction

8  c = tan  (  N ), where tan  is the coefficient of sliding friction

9 Possible explanation- water pressure plays a big role  c = tan  (*  N ), where tan  is the coefficient of sliding friction and *  N =  N – fluid pressure

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11 What drives a thrust belt?? Oldtimers thought that decollements beneath thrust belts dipped away from the elevated hinterland- and therefore gravity "sliding" was the main mechanism

12 Once armed with the knowledge of fluid pressure, oldtimers really thought they had it figured out. The can slides at low angles, not because of lower friction, but due to elevated fluid (air) pressure during thermal expansion that counteracts weight of can

13 But now we know that decollements to thrust belts dip toward the hinterland. Thrust belts move uphill!

14 Elevated fluid pressure certainly decreases the stress required to move a thrust belt. Gravitational stresses due to elevated topography also aids sliding. BUT, a push from the rear is still necessary

15 Critical Taper Thrusts belts are wedge shaped- characterized by a topographic slope (  ) and a decollement dip (  ) Only at some critical angle (  +  ), will the thrust belt propagate

16 The critical taper angle is controlled by the coefficient of friction along the decollement and the frictional sliding strength of the rock EPISODIC propagation

17 Thrust belts create topographic loads that flex the lithosphere like a person on a diving board- foreland basins!

18 Fault Project Information to research: - Geographic setting - Regional geologic setting - Geometry: orientation and spatial dimensions - Kinematics: Sense and magnitude of slip, type of fault - Timing: slip history, active or inactive? - Mechanics: relate fault movement to stress - Regional tectonic significance - Practical significance

19 Paper Guidelines 6-8 pages text (double spaced) + few illustrations Need to have the following sections: Abstract Introduction Geometry and Kinematics of Fault Significance Conclusions References: At least five cited (only two may be websites); Format: follow that of the journal Geology

20 Next lecture: Strike-slip fault systems (D&R: 357-371)

21 Important terminology/concepts role of elevated pore fluid pressure in movement of thrust sheets Critical taper theory / wedge theory foreland basin development


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