|
Read Full Article (file size: 707976 bytes) Cited by
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 112,
B12404,
doi:10.1029/2007JB004997,
2007
Underthrusting-accretion cycle: Work budget as revealed by the boundary element method
Mario Del Castello
Geosciences Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
Michele L. Cooke
Geosciences Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract
Sandbox models of accretionary wedges have demonstrated that fault systems grow episodically via cycles of alternating wedge
thickening, which is accommodated by slip along faults within the wedge (underthrusting), and wedge lengthening, which is
accommodated by growth of new faults at the wedge toe (accretion). The transition between these two modes of deformation is
controlled by the interplay of work against gravity, frictional heating, the work of deformation around faults, and the work
of fault propagation and seismic/acoustic energy. Using numerical mechanical models based on the boundary element method,
we have simulated the deformation observed in sandbox experiments, providing a mechanical analysis of the underthrusting/accretion
transition. Our results show that the total work done by the contracting wedge increases during the underthrusting stage up
to a critical value when the propagation of a new frontal thrust significantly reduces the work required for further deformation.
The numerical models also predict the location of the maximum shear along the basal décollement during underthrusting as well
as the energetically most viable position and vergence for the nucleation of a new thrust. These locations do not coincide,
and the match of the energetically most favorable position with the experimental results suggests that the new thrust ramps
develop first ahead and then link down and backward to the propagating basal décollement. The shear localization producing
a new thrust ramp will occur where the energy spent by the deforming wedge is minimized due to an optimal combination of gravitational,
frictional, internal, and propagation work terms.
Received 16
February
2007;
accepted 20
September
2007;
published 29
December
2007.
Keywords: wedge mechanics;
accretion-underthrusting cycle;
work budget.
Index Terms: 8004 Structural Geology: Dynamics and mechanics of faulting (8118); 8010 Structural Geology: Fractures and faults; 8020 Structural Geology: Mechanics, theory, and modeling; 8108 Tectonophysics: Continental tectonics: compressional.
Read Full Article (file size: 707976 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Del Castello, M., and M. L. Cooke
(2007),
Underthrusting-accretion cycle: Work budget as revealed by the boundary element method,
J. Geophys. Res.,
112,
B12404,
doi:10.1029/2007JB004997.
Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.
|