Structural Interactions Between Deep Mesozoic Strike-Slip Faults and Shallow Cenozoic Contractional Folds in the Northern Tianshan Foreland Basin (NW China)
Zhenyu Peng, Xin Wang, Fabien Graveleau, Bruno C. Vendeville, Alan G. Nunns
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the rejuvenated mountain front, preexisting basement structures are often reactivated and interact with the subsequent thin-skinned deformation. How the deep structures affect the shallower ones is key to establishing the processes and mechanisms for the foreland fold-and-thrust system. We presented an exceptional case study on the structural inheritance between the deep Mesozoic strike-slip faults and the shallow Cenozoic contractional folds from the Northern Tianshan foreland basin, Northwest China, using high-resolution 2-D and 3-D seismic data. Based on the interpretation of seismic data and progressive restoration, our study illustrated the NW-trending Ai-Ka strike-slip faults controlled a dextral shear zone, which initiated the Gaoquan restraining bend in the basement during Jurassic. Later, these strike-slip structures, close to the mountain front, were reactivated during the N-S Mio-Pliocene contraction, and folded the upper décollements that characterized the localization of thin-skinned deformation. In contrast, in the further foreland, nonreactive strike-slip faults controlled basal décollement pinch-out, which localizes the thin-skinned deformation, resulting in en échelon folds that trace the strike of the deep strike-slip faults. The onset time of each anticline shows that the thin-skinned deformation first extended laterally and then propagated further north, resulting in ca. 7 km shortening along the whole foreland. Moreover, the shortening rate decreased eastward from 0.90 to 1.46 mm/yr along the Gaoquan-Kayindike structural line to 0.24–0.37 mm/yr along the Dunan structural line as the Sikeshu depression, constrained by the NW-trending Ai-Ka strike-slip fault, narrowed eastward. This feature implies that the width of the depression may control the amount of displacement propagation.
期刊介绍:
Tectonics (TECT) presents original scientific contributions that describe and explain the evolution, structure, and deformation of Earth¹s lithosphere. Contributions are welcome from any relevant area of research, including field, laboratory, petrological, geochemical, geochronological, geophysical, remote-sensing, and modeling studies. Multidisciplinary studies are particularly encouraged. Tectonics welcomes studies across the range of geologic time.