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Three-dimensional model of a mushwad and its implications for the evolution of an Appalachian subrecess in northwestern Georgia Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT In a well-defined subrecess in the Appalachian thrust belt in northwestern Georgia, two distinct fold trains intersect at ~50° in the down-plunge depression of the Floyd synclinorium. A mushwad (ductile duplex) of tectonically thickened weak-layer rocks (primarily the shale-dominated Cambrian Conasauga Formation) filled the space beneath folds and faults of the overlying Cambrian–Ordovician regional stiff layer (mushwad roof). Measurements of the mushwad thickness from balanced cross sections provide the basis for three-dimensional (3-D) models. Tectonically thickened weak-layer shales in a model using a simple line-length balance of the stiff layer have a volume of ~64% of the volume in the deformed-state model, indicating that this balanced reconstruction is not appropriate. Previous work demonstrated deposition of a thick mud-dominated succession in a basement graben to balance the volume. A 3-D model incorporating a thick Conasauga Formation shale succession deposited in a basement graben yields good correspondence to the deformed-state mushwad volume. That model requires vertical separation on the graben boundary faults greater than the present small-magnitude separation; unconformable truncation of the upper part of the Cambrian–Ordovician carbonate succession documents Ordovician inversion of the graben boundary faults. In the 3-D models, the distribution of thickness in the deformed state suggests movement of weak-layer shale out of the planes of cross sections and up plunge away from the structural depression of the Floyd synclinorium. Out-of-plane tectonic translation is consistent with a relatively uniform depositional thickness of ~800 m, which allows calculation of the magnitude of vertical separation on basement faults during Conasauga Formation deposition.
Robust Inversion of Time-domain Electromagnetic Data: Application to Unexploded Ordnance Discrimination Available to Purchase
Unexploded ordnance discrimination using magnetic and electromagnetic sensors: Case study from a former military site Available to Purchase
Balancing tectonic shortening in contrasting deformation styles through a mechanically heterogeneous stratigraphic succession Available to Purchase
Multiple levels of frontal ramps and detachment flats accommodate tectonic shortening in contrasting deformation styles at different levels in a mechanically hetero geneous stratigraphic succession in a foreland thrust belt. The late Paleozoic Appalachian thrust belt in Alabama exhibits a balance of shortening in contrasting deformation styles at different stratigraphic levels. The regional décollement is in a weak unit (Cambrian shale) near the base of the Paleozoic succession above Precambrian crystalline basement rocks. Basement faults, now beneath the décollement, controlled the sedimentary thickness of the Cambrian shale and the location of high-amplitude frontal ramps of the regional stiff layer (Cambrian-Ordovician massive carbonate); shortening in a mushwad (ductile duplex) from thick Cambrian shale is balanced by translation of the regional stiff layer at a high-amplitude frontal ramp above a basement fault. A trailing, high-amplitude, brittle duplex of the regional stiff layer has a floor on the regional décollement and a roof that is also the floor of an upper-level, lower-amplitude, brittle duplex. The roof of the upper-level brittle duplex is a diffuse ductile detachment below an upper-level mushwad, with which parts of the brittle duplex are imbricated. The basal detachment of the upper-level mushwad changes along strike into a frontal ramp at a location coincident with a sedimentary facies change in the weak shale unit that hosts the mushwad. The roof of the upper-level mushwad is a brittle massive sandstone. Shortening on the regional décollement is balanced successively upward through contrasting tectonic styles in successive mechanically contrasting stratigraphic units.