Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt

This dissertation focuses on the kinematic evolution of two major categories of contractional tectonics: collisional orogenic belts and toe structures of passive margins, which are characterized by fold-thrust belts that are hundreds of kilometer-scale and tens of kilometer-scale, respectively. The...

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Main Author: Dian, He
Other Authors: Webb, Alexander
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2013
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Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06082013-205000/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-06082013-2050002013-06-14T03:10:20Z Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt Dian, He Geology & Geophysics This dissertation focuses on the kinematic evolution of two major categories of contractional tectonics: collisional orogenic belts and toe structures of passive margins, which are characterized by fold-thrust belts that are hundreds of kilometer-scale and tens of kilometer-scale, respectively. The Himalayan orogen is an excellent example of collisional orogenic belts along convergent plate boundaries. It is commonly structurally defined as three stacked units separated by two fault systems: the Main Central thrust (MCT) and South Tibet detachment (STD). The development and emplacement of the middle unit, the Himalayan crystalline core, has long been debated within the extrusion framework, a process that involves exhumation of the crystalline core to the surface. Recently, the debate has expanded to two end-member regimes: extrusion versus underplating. To determine how the crystalline core evolved, an integrated investigation was conducted, involving structural mapping, microstructural, quartz c-axis fabric, and geochronological analyses across the northern margins of two frontal klippen in the Nepal Himalaya: the Dadeldhura klippe and Kathmandu Nappe. The work suggests that the STD occurs and merges with the MCT in these two klippen. The merging of the MCT and STD requires that the crystalline core was emplaced at depth via tectonic wedging kinematics, incompatible with extrusion models. By synthesizing the Himalayan evolution history from the development and emplacement of the crystalline core to ongoing deformation, a reconstruction shows that Himalayan mountain-building processes are dominated by underplating. The Perdido fold-thrust belt is a gravity-driven toe structure in the passive margin of the Gulf of Mexico. Structural models for the Perdido fold-thrust belt are highly dependent upon the interpretation of seismic images, which commonly display wipe-out zones associated with faults. Fault interpretations in seismic wipe-out zones are commonly non-unique. Trishear, a quantitative fault-propagation folding model, was applied to an anticlinal structure in the Perdido fold-thrust belt and reproduced the fold geometry. Three dimensional kinematic evolution was reconstructed by interpolating the best-fit models of the serial cross sections. The trishear modeling indicates that the Perdido fold-thrust belt underwent ~7.5-12.5 km shortening, which could balance the landward extension of the passive margin during the same period. Webb, Alexander Nunn, Jeff Dutrow, Barbara Henry, Darrell Clift, Peter Chicoine, David LSU 2013-06-13 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06082013-205000/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06082013-205000/ en unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached herein a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below and in appropriate University policies, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Geology & Geophysics
spellingShingle Geology & Geophysics
Dian, He
Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt
description This dissertation focuses on the kinematic evolution of two major categories of contractional tectonics: collisional orogenic belts and toe structures of passive margins, which are characterized by fold-thrust belts that are hundreds of kilometer-scale and tens of kilometer-scale, respectively. The Himalayan orogen is an excellent example of collisional orogenic belts along convergent plate boundaries. It is commonly structurally defined as three stacked units separated by two fault systems: the Main Central thrust (MCT) and South Tibet detachment (STD). The development and emplacement of the middle unit, the Himalayan crystalline core, has long been debated within the extrusion framework, a process that involves exhumation of the crystalline core to the surface. Recently, the debate has expanded to two end-member regimes: extrusion versus underplating. To determine how the crystalline core evolved, an integrated investigation was conducted, involving structural mapping, microstructural, quartz c-axis fabric, and geochronological analyses across the northern margins of two frontal klippen in the Nepal Himalaya: the Dadeldhura klippe and Kathmandu Nappe. The work suggests that the STD occurs and merges with the MCT in these two klippen. The merging of the MCT and STD requires that the crystalline core was emplaced at depth via tectonic wedging kinematics, incompatible with extrusion models. By synthesizing the Himalayan evolution history from the development and emplacement of the crystalline core to ongoing deformation, a reconstruction shows that Himalayan mountain-building processes are dominated by underplating. The Perdido fold-thrust belt is a gravity-driven toe structure in the passive margin of the Gulf of Mexico. Structural models for the Perdido fold-thrust belt are highly dependent upon the interpretation of seismic images, which commonly display wipe-out zones associated with faults. Fault interpretations in seismic wipe-out zones are commonly non-unique. Trishear, a quantitative fault-propagation folding model, was applied to an anticlinal structure in the Perdido fold-thrust belt and reproduced the fold geometry. Three dimensional kinematic evolution was reconstructed by interpolating the best-fit models of the serial cross sections. The trishear modeling indicates that the Perdido fold-thrust belt underwent ~7.5-12.5 km shortening, which could balance the landward extension of the passive margin during the same period.
author2 Webb, Alexander
author_facet Webb, Alexander
Dian, He
author Dian, He
author_sort Dian, He
title Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt
title_short Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt
title_full Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt
title_fullStr Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt
title_full_unstemmed Contractional Tectonics: The Himalayan Orogen and Perdido Fold-thrust Belt
title_sort contractional tectonics: the himalayan orogen and perdido fold-thrust belt
publisher LSU
publishDate 2013
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06082013-205000/
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