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Quantification of three-dimensional folding using fluvial terraces: A case study from the Mushi anticline, northern margin of the Chinese Pamir

Quantification of three-dimensional folding using fluvial terraces: A case study from the Mushi anticline, northern margin of the Chinese Pamir
Quantification of three-dimensional folding using fluvial terraces: A case study from the Mushi anticline, northern margin of the Chinese Pamir
Fold deformation in three dimensions involves shortening, uplift, and lateral growth. Fluvial terraces represent strain markers that have been widely applied to constrain a fold's shortening and uplift. For the lateral growth, however, the utility of fluvial terraces has been commonly ignored. Situated along northern margin of Chinese Pamir, the Mushi anticline preserves, along its northern flank, flights of passively deformed fluvial terraces that can be used to constrain three-dimensional folding history, especially lateral growth. The Mushi anticline is a geometrically simple fault-tip fold with a total shortening of 740?±?110?m and rock uplift of ~1300?m. Geologic and geomorphic mapping and dGPS surveys reveal that terrace surfaces perpendicular to the fold's strike display increased rotation with age, implying the fold grows by progressive limb rotation. We use a pure-shear fault-tip fold model to estimate a uniform shortening rate of 1.5?+?1.3/?0.5?mm/a and a rock-uplift rate of 2.3?+?2.1/?0.8?mm/a. Parallel to the fold's strike, longitudinal profiles of terrace surfaces also display age-dependent increases in slopes. We present a new model to distinguish lateral growth mechanisms (lateral lengthening and/or rotation above a fixed tip). This model indicates that eastward lengthening of the Mushi anticline ceased by at least ~134?ka and its lateral growth has been dominated by rotation. Our study confirms that terrace deformation along a fold's strike not only can constrain the lateral lengthening rate but can serve to quantify the magnitude and rate of lateral rotation: attributes that are commonly difficult to define when relying on other geomorphic criteria.
fluvial terrace, fold, lateral growth, Pamir, shortening, uplift
4628-4647
Li, Tao
79e86448-08d7-4075-8f31-34b6c9903ed1
Chen, Jie
7181526d-ec25-480e-a35e-37bf4616e131
Thompson, Jessica A.
1437afcb-95f7-467e-8a6e-f47c2f5acb1f
Burbank, Douglas W.
17377a1b-8487-4869-9980-506635807397
Yang, Xiaodong
0c44aab1-3c52-4e2a-925e-565a34967c57
Li, Tao
79e86448-08d7-4075-8f31-34b6c9903ed1
Chen, Jie
7181526d-ec25-480e-a35e-37bf4616e131
Thompson, Jessica A.
1437afcb-95f7-467e-8a6e-f47c2f5acb1f
Burbank, Douglas W.
17377a1b-8487-4869-9980-506635807397
Yang, Xiaodong
0c44aab1-3c52-4e2a-925e-565a34967c57

Li, Tao, Chen, Jie, Thompson, Jessica A., Burbank, Douglas W. and Yang, Xiaodong (2013) Quantification of three-dimensional folding using fluvial terraces: A case study from the Mushi anticline, northern margin of the Chinese Pamir. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 118 (8), 4628-4647. (doi:10.1002/jgrb.50316).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Fold deformation in three dimensions involves shortening, uplift, and lateral growth. Fluvial terraces represent strain markers that have been widely applied to constrain a fold's shortening and uplift. For the lateral growth, however, the utility of fluvial terraces has been commonly ignored. Situated along northern margin of Chinese Pamir, the Mushi anticline preserves, along its northern flank, flights of passively deformed fluvial terraces that can be used to constrain three-dimensional folding history, especially lateral growth. The Mushi anticline is a geometrically simple fault-tip fold with a total shortening of 740?±?110?m and rock uplift of ~1300?m. Geologic and geomorphic mapping and dGPS surveys reveal that terrace surfaces perpendicular to the fold's strike display increased rotation with age, implying the fold grows by progressive limb rotation. We use a pure-shear fault-tip fold model to estimate a uniform shortening rate of 1.5?+?1.3/?0.5?mm/a and a rock-uplift rate of 2.3?+?2.1/?0.8?mm/a. Parallel to the fold's strike, longitudinal profiles of terrace surfaces also display age-dependent increases in slopes. We present a new model to distinguish lateral growth mechanisms (lateral lengthening and/or rotation above a fixed tip). This model indicates that eastward lengthening of the Mushi anticline ceased by at least ~134?ka and its lateral growth has been dominated by rotation. Our study confirms that terrace deformation along a fold's strike not only can constrain the lateral lengthening rate but can serve to quantify the magnitude and rate of lateral rotation: attributes that are commonly difficult to define when relying on other geomorphic criteria.

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Published date: August 2013
Keywords: fluvial terrace, fold, lateral growth, Pamir, shortening, uplift
Organisations: Geology & Geophysics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 372160
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/372160
PURE UUID: 0076294a-747f-4841-b069-9fbcdc21b480

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Date deposited: 26 Nov 2014 14:05
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:32

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Contributors

Author: Tao Li
Author: Jie Chen
Author: Jessica A. Thompson
Author: Douglas W. Burbank
Author: Xiaodong Yang

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