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Read Full Article (file size: 2575566 bytes) Cited by
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 112,
B02403,
doi:10.1029/2006JB004376,
2007
Effect of predeformational basin geometry in the kinematic evolution of a thin-skinned orogenic wedge: Insights from three-dimensional
finite element modeling of the Provo salient, Sevier fold-thrust belt, Utah
Sanghoon Kwon
Department of Earth System Sciences, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea
Gautam Mitra
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA
Renato Perucchio
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA
Abstract
In fold-thrust belts, sedimentary cover rocks are detached from undeformed basement and undergo crustal-scale shortening and
internal deformation. We have investigated a three-dimensional (3-D), nonlinear, elastic-plastic finite element model using
the restored Provo salient of the Sevier belt as our initial configuration. In the model the deformed sedimentary prism displays
large-scale geometries that are seen in many natural fold-thrust belts (e.g., arcuate salient, wedge-shaped cross section)
and kinematics that are compatible with observations in the internal and external portions of the Provo salient; these suggest
that the model can be used to predict geologic information that is generally not available from detailed observational studies
in natural fold-thrust belts (e.g., strain history, material displacements, stress conditions). The model results indicate
symmetric, noncoaxial, plane strain paths with consistent stress and strain orientations and material displacement directions
in the middle of the 3-D wedge, and fully 3-D, nonsymmetric, noncoaxial, nonplane strain paths with out-of-transport material
displacements over the lateral boundaries. The results from test runs further suggest that oblique ramps with strike direction
less than 20° from the regional transport direction behave like lateral ramps, and those with strike direction greater than
80° from the regional transport direction behave similar to frontal ramps. Oblique ramps with dips greater than 60° behave
like tear faults. These variations in different parts of the wedge are caused mainly by interaction between the transport
parallel motion of the moving wedge and the preexisting footwall template of ramps and flats that the wedge has to ride over
during its evolution.
Received 4
March
2006;
accepted 13
October
2006;
published 22
February
2007.
Keywords: finite element modeling;
orogenic wedge;
kinematic evolution.
Index Terms: 8099 Structural Geology: General or miscellaneous; 8020 Structural Geology: Mechanics, theory, and modeling; 8004 Structural Geology: Dynamics and mechanics of faulting (8118); 8011 Structural Geology: Kinematics of crustal and mantle deformation; 8015 Structural Geology: Local crustal structure.
Read Full Article (file size: 2575566 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Kwon, S., G. Mitra, and R. Perucchio
(2007),
Effect of predeformational basin geometry in the kinematic evolution of a thin-skinned orogenic wedge: Insights from three-dimensional
finite element modeling of the Provo salient, Sevier fold-thrust belt, Utah,
J. Geophys. Res.,
112,
B02403,
doi:10.1029/2006JB004376.
Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.
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