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TECTONICS,
VOL. 13, NO. 5,
PAGES 1150–1160,
1994
Investigating the crustal structure of a strike-slip “step-over” zone along the Great Glen fault
J. H. McBride
British Institutions Reflection Profiling Syndicate, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Abstract
Strike-slip step-overs and bends are regions of anomalous deformation that may yield clues to the mechanical behavior of the
Earth's crust. Experimental reprocessing of a marine deep seismic reflection profile cutting across an ∼35-km-wide right-stepping
step-over developed on the Great Glen fault system north of the Inner Moray Firth basin (east of Northwest Highlands, Scotland)
reveals a restricted zone of prominent reflections and diffractions beginning at 7–8 km depth, continuing as deep as the interpreted
Moho discontinuity at 26–27 km. Geological interpretation of this zone suggests a concentration of possible diffractors marking
sharp structural disruption underlain by a ∼12-km thick layer of subhorizontal and moderately dipping reflectors that dominates
the lower crust in the step-over region. The known kinematic history of the Great Glen fault system, together with the observed
direction of the step-over, implies that a zone of contraction would have formed within the step-over during early Caledonian
sinistral strike slip. The seismic reflection structure can be interpreted as developing by deformation associated with contraction
and possible block rotation between the two fault segments such that the diffractive zone represents steep structure in a
near-vertical zone of strike slip which passes deeper into a layer of low-angle dipping thrusts or shear zones. The results
of this study are consistent with a concept of mechanical detachment in the middle crust as documented for areas of contraction
along active strike-slip faults.
Received 2
November
1993;
accepted 16
February
1994.
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Citation: McBride, J. H.
(1994),
Investigating the crustal structure of a strike-slip “step-over” zone along the Great Glen fault,
Tectonics,
13(5),
1150–1160.
Copyright 1994 by the American Geophysical Union.
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