Strain and kinematics within the Salmon River suture zone and western Idaho shear zone, Idaho, USA: Exploring the contribution of ductile stretching to mass transfer and exhumation in fold-thrust and transpressional systems
Andrea E. Richardson , Sean P. Long , William K. Barba , Matthew P. McKay
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Measuring penetrative strain is critical for understanding the 3D strain field of structural systems. Here, we investigate ductile strain and kinematics in two Cordilleran structural systems in north-central Idaho: the Salmon River suture zone (SRSZ), which is a west-vergent ductile fold-thrust system that accommodated shortening associated with terrane collision between ∼144 and 105 Ma, and the north-striking, subvertical western Idaho shear zone (WISZ), which accommodated dextral-transpressional shearing between ∼105 and 86 Ma. We collected finite strain data from stretched clasts in three SRSZ thrust sheets, which define 56–87% average thrust-parallel stretching and 35–48% average thrust-normal thinning. Thrust-parallel stretching contributed >27 km of cumulative displacement to the up-dip portion of the fold-thrust system, comparable to the 34 km of total thrust displacement estimated at down-dip levels. In the WISZ, we documented dextral kinematics in lineation-normal planes, and we measured boudinaged and folded granitic dikes to estimate late-stage (∼91-86 Ma) strain, which yielded 65% minimum lineation-parallel stretching and 50% minimum east-west shortening. Subvertical stretching in the WISZ accommodated >9–10 km of exhumation relative to the Idaho batholith to the east. The SRSZ and WISZ both demonstrate the 1st-order importance of ductile stretching for accommodating the large-scale transfer of mass and exhumation in fold-thrust and transpressional systems.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Structural Geology publishes process-oriented investigations about structural geology using appropriate combinations of analog and digital field data, seismic reflection data, satellite-derived data, geometric analysis, kinematic analysis, laboratory experiments, computer visualizations, and analogue or numerical modelling on all scales. Contributions are encouraged to draw perspectives from rheology, rock mechanics, geophysics,metamorphism, sedimentology, petroleum geology, economic geology, geodynamics, planetary geology, tectonics and neotectonics to provide a more powerful understanding of deformation processes and systems. Given the visual nature of the discipline, supplementary materials that portray the data and analysis in 3-D or quasi 3-D manners, including the use of videos, and/or graphical abstracts can significantly strengthen the impact of contributions.