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Discrepencies

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We will go with the text definition of dips 30 Fault workers commonly refer to lenses in ... Nonconformity - look for evidence such as basal conglomerate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Discrepencies


1
Discrepencies
  • Different researchers use different cut-off
    points for what we term low-angle faults. We will
    go with the text definition of dips lt30
  • Fault workers commonly refer to lenses in fault
    zones as horses when they are m-km scale
    structures
  • Triangular features developed by erosion of fault
    surfaces on fault-bounded mountain fronts are
    fault facets. Flatirons are morphologically
    similar structures developed by erosion of tilted
    sedimentary layers

2
Finding fault(s)
  • How to evaluate whether a fault is present in the
    subsurface or an area of poor exposure

3
Fault .but may be
  • Abrupt lithologic change
  • Abrupt change in orientation of bedding or
    foliation
  • In both cases, look for evidence of fault-zone
    deformation with proximity to contact
  • Nonconformity - look for evidence such as basal
    conglomerate
  • Angular unconformity (see above) or Fold (look
    for lithologic continuity)

4
Use of stratigraphy
  • Faults can cut out (omit) or stack (repeat)
    stratigraphic intervals. Stratigraphic omission
    or repetition can be evident through mapping or
    drill core.

5
Sense of slip in the absence of piercing points
  • Relative ages of hanging wall and footwall
    materials constrains sense of slip
  • Metamorphic grade of hanging versus footwall
    constrains kinematics

6
Heterogeneity and anisotropy
  • Fractures typically nucleate on heterogeneities
    (e.g., fossil)
  • Low-angle reverse, or thrust, faults localize in
    mechanically weak layers such as shale and
    evaporite. They cut across stronger layers in
    short steps
  • As long as it is favorably oriented, it is
    apparently energetically easier to reactivate an
    existing fault than create a new one

7
Pattern has meaning
  • Large-scale fault patterns reflect tectonic
    environments (plate movements)
  • Patterns reflect most energetically favorable
    response to imposed displacement
  • We will look at overall strains and patterns of
    faulting in a different order than indicated in
    syllabus extensional, transcurrent, then
    contractional regimes
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