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Livingstone Thrust

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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 2011
AAPG Bulletin (2011) 95 (11): 1821–1849.
...Michael A. Cooley; Raymond A. Price; John M. Dixon; T. Kurtis Kyser Abstract The Livingstone Range anticlinorium marks a hanging-wall ramp across which the Livingstone thrust cuts up eastward approximately 1000 m (∼3280 ft) between regional decollements in the Devonian and the Jurassic strata...
FIGURES | View All (17)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 2011
AAPG Bulletin (2011) 95 (11): 1851–1882.
...Michael A. Cooley; Raymond A. Price; T. Kurtis Kyser; John M. Dixon Abstract The Livingstone Range anticlinorium (LRA) marks a major hanging-wall ramp where the Livingstone thrust cuts approximately 1000 m (∼3281 ft) between regional decollement in the upper part of the Devonian Palliser Formation...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Image
Proposed kinematic evolution of the Centre Peak anticline. Approximately 30 degrees of shear occurred within the Livingstone thrust sheet during thrust-propagation folding.
Published: 01 March 2009
Fig. 2. Proposed kinematic evolution of the Centre Peak anticline. Approximately 30 degrees of shear occurred within the Livingstone thrust sheet during thrust-propagation folding.
Image
(a) Line A and (b) line B poststack time-migrated sections. The velocity pull-up marked is interpreted to be an artifact caused by the presence of high-velocity carbonate rocks in the hanging wall of the Livingstone thrust.
Published: 01 October 2008
Figure 3. (a) Line A and (b) line B poststack time-migrated sections. The velocity pull-up marked is interpreted to be an artifact caused by the presence of high-velocity carbonate rocks in the hanging wall of the Livingstone thrust.
Image
More detailed interpretations of the structures carried in the hangingwall of the Livingstone Thrust of Line A (a) and Line B (b). The interpretations are based on mapped surface geology, geological cross-sections and seismic reflection characteristics. The data are displayed at a 1:1 scale.
Published: 01 September 2008
Fig. 9. More detailed interpretations of the structures carried in the hangingwall of the Livingstone Thrust of Line A (a) and Line B (b). The interpretations are based on mapped surface geology, geological cross-sections and seismic reflection characteristics. The data are displayed at a 1:1
Image
(a) Line A and (b) Line B, poststack time migrated to a datum of 2000 m above sea level. The velocity pull-up observed at about 2.7 s from 0 to 8 km distance in the western part of the section is an artefact caused by high processing velocities above the Livingstone Thrust. The highlighted areas are referred to in the text.
Published: 01 September 2008
Fig. 5. (a) Line A and (b) Line B, poststack time migrated to a datum of 2000 m above sea level. The velocity pull-up observed at about 2.7 s from 0 to 8 km distance in the western part of the section is an artefact caused by high processing velocities above the Livingstone Thrust
Image
Hypothetical sequential palinspastic reconstruction of a composite balanced cross section showing the thermal, fluid, and deformation history of the southern Canadian Front Ranges and Foothills. Present-day cross sections XX′ and YY′ shown in panel E are modified from R. A. Price (2007, personal communication) and P. MacKay (2003, personal communication), respectively. Cross section locations are shown in Figure 1B. All ages are approximate and are based on the assumption that the initial movement of Livingstone thrust occurred at approximately 64 Ma (see text for discussion).
Published: 01 November 2011
, personal communication) and P. MacKay (2003, personal communication), respectively. Cross section locations are shown in Figure 1B . All ages are approximate and are based on the assumption that the initial movement of Livingstone thrust occurred at approximately 64 Ma (see text for discussion).
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2009
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2009) 57 (1): 116–120.
...Fig. 2. Proposed kinematic evolution of the Centre Peak anticline. Approximately 30 degrees of shear occurred within the Livingstone thrust sheet during thrust-propagation folding. ...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: Geophysics
Published: 01 October 2008
Geophysics (2008) 73 (5): VE255–VE260.
...Figure 3. (a) Line A and (b) line B poststack time-migrated sections. The velocity pull-up marked is interpreted to be an artifact caused by the presence of high-velocity carbonate rocks in the hanging wall of the Livingstone thrust. ...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1993
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1993) 41 (2): 232–243.
... the Bluff Mountain Slide, it is described in the second part of the paper. STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY OF THE CROWSNEST AREA Most of the map area (Figs. 1, 3) lies structurally within the hanging wall of the Livingstone thrust, a major north-south striking low-angle thrust of the southern Alberta foothills. (Figs. 1...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2008
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2008) 56 (3): 199–208.
...Fig. 9. More detailed interpretations of the structures carried in the hangingwall of the Livingstone Thrust of Line A (a) and Line B (b). The interpretations are based on mapped surface geology, geological cross-sections and seismic reflection characteristics. The data are displayed at a 1:1...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Image
View south at the core of the Centre Peak anticline, a typical chevron-style thrust-propagation fold in the Livingstone Range anticlinorium. The thin solid lines represent stratigraphic contacts. Stratigraphic units (Cbg, Cbm, Clvtv, Clvtv-b, and Cmh) are described in the legend in Figure 3. The x and x′ mark the top of the Banff Formation that has been offset by approximately 250 m (∼820 ft) by a thrust fault that propagated out of the backlimb of the fold. Thrust faults are represented by thick dashed lines. Cmh = undivided Mount Head Formation; Clvtv = Turner Valley Member of the Livingstone Formation; Clvtv = Brown marker unit within the Turner Valley Member of the Livingstone Formation; Cbm = Banff Formation micrite unit; Cbg = Banff Formation grainstone unit.
Published: 01 November 2011
Figure 9 View south at the core of the Centre Peak anticline, a typical chevron-style thrust-propagation fold in the Livingstone Range anticlinorium. The thin solid lines represent stratigraphic contacts. Stratigraphic units (Cbg, Cbm, Clvtv, Clvtv-b, and Cmh) are described in the legend
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 02 January 2020
DOI: 10.1144/SP487.7
EISBN: 9781786204721
... localized shear failures (thrust faults). Discussions are illustrated using short case studies from the Bolivian Subandean chain (Incahuasi anticline), the Canadian Cordillera (Livingstone anticlinorium) and Subalpine chains of France and Switzerland. Only fault–bend folding is purely fault-related...
FIGURES | View All (15)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1984
AAPG Bulletin (1984) 68 (7): 947.
... Formation, not the Mississippian Livingstone Formation as previously mapped. The panel of Livingstone rocks west of the heart is stratigraphically up to the east. Based on both stratigraphic and structural considerations, the thrust stack formed in an east-to-west sequential development from rock panels...
Image
View south at the core of the Centre Peak anticline as exposed on the southern side of the Green Creek Canyon (projected northward into section AA′ in Figure 6). Two east-verging thrust faults (thick dashed lines) extend along the hinge zone. The lower near-vertical thrust fault dies out updip within the fold hinge within the Turner Valley Member of the Livingstone Formation (Clvtv). The upper thrust fault emerges from a bedding detachment approximately 20 m (∼66 ft) below the top of the uppermost micritic unit of the Banff Formation (Cbm) and deflects the hinge zone eastward. The footwall and hanging-wall cutoffs of the top of the Banff Formation along this thrust fault (X and X′, respectively) have been offset approximately 250 m (∼820 ft) along this fault. Cmh = Mount Head Formation; Clvtv-b = brown micritic marker unit within Turner Valley Member of the Livingstone Formation; Cbg = grainstone unit near the top of the Banff Formation.
Published: 01 November 2011
out updip within the fold hinge within the Turner Valley Member of the Livingstone Formation (Clvtv). The upper thrust fault emerges from a bedding detachment approximately 20 m (∼66 ft) below the top of the uppermost micritic unit of the Banff Formation (Cbm) and deflects the hinge zone eastward
Image
The deformation, thermal, and fluid history of the foreland thrust and fold belt adjacent to the Livingstone Range Anticlinorium. After a period of foreland basin sedimentation initially insulated the underlying strata (A), thrusting deformation swept eastward through the rocks, bringing with it an abrupt influx of meteoric fluids that rapidly cooled the strata.
Published: 01 March 2009
Fig. 3. The deformation, thermal, and fluid history of the foreland thrust and fold belt adjacent to the Livingstone Range Anticlinorium. After a period of foreland basin sedimentation initially insulated the underlying strata (A), thrusting deformation swept eastward through the rocks, bringing
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1986
GSA Bulletin (1986) 97 (7): 859–868.
... of the Livingston Formation, a volcanic and volcaniclastic assemblage that is conformable with underlying Cretaceous clastic rocks and with the overlying Sphinx Conglomerate. No datable materials were obtained from the Sphinx, but both it and the Livingston were deformed by the Hilgard fault system, a series...
Image
Hanging wall cutoff maps of a. the present McConnell Thrust and b. the “initial” McConnell Thrust in the northern part of the Elbow–Sheep area, with position of windows and existing leading edge of McConnell Thrust shown for reference. Maps are not palinspastically restored. Df = Cairn, Southesk and Alexo formations, Dp = Palliser Formation, DCep = Exshaw, Banff and Pekisko formations, Cr = Rundle Group, Cs = Shunda Formation, CI = Livingstone Formation, Emp = Elbow multiduplex.
Published: 01 September 2001
Fig.15. Hanging wall cutoff maps of a. the present McConnell Thrust and b. the “initial” McConnell Thrust in the northern part of the Elbow–Sheep area, with position of windows and existing leading edge of McConnell Thrust shown for reference. Maps are not palinspastically restored. Df
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1999
GSA Bulletin (1999) 111 (3): 317–346.
... of the Foothills. In contrast, northward thrust terminations at the Paleozoic level commonly occur at both tip lines and lateral ramps. Subsurface data reveal that there have been some misconceptions regarding large-scale structural relationships. For example, the McConnell and Livingstone sheets are actually...
Image
Southwest end of the Fullerton Tear, northwest of Mount Fullerton. The Fullerton Tear merges with the roof thrust of the Elbow multiduplex and does not offset it or the underlying duplex structures. Dc = Cairn Formation, Dsx = Southesk Formation, Dp = Palliser Formation, Dpu = upper Palliser Formation, DCeb = Exshaw and Banff formations, CI = Livingstone Formation, RT = roof thrust of Elbow multiduplex, SRFT = subsidiary roof and floor thrust within Elbow multiduplex. View to the northeast.
Published: 01 September 2001
Palliser Formation, DCeb = Exshaw and Banff formations, CI = Livingstone Formation, RT = roof thrust of Elbow multiduplex, SRFT = subsidiary roof and floor thrust within Elbow multiduplex. View to the northeast.