Lithospheric buckling and far-foreland deformation during the Laramide and Appalachian orogenies
Abstract
Major intraplate tectonics within North America (Laurentia) occurs during times of major orogenesis along the plate margins. During mountain building, typical structures of the hinterland are an orogenic plateau and fold-and-thrust belts, while in the far foreland (intraplate) areas long-wavelength ( 200 km or longer) folds and fault-reactivation features form. Long-wavelength folds are evident in both the Appalachian and Laramide orogenic forelands, with the stratigraphy recording the timing of the uplift. This contribution examines the model of lithospheric buckling - periodic folding associated with a horizontal endload on the edge of the plate - based on scaled, physical experiments and corroborated by numerical models. The Laramide (75-55 Ma) intraplate orogen in the classical location in Wyoming contains basement-cored arches spaced 200 km apart, for which the mechanism of uplift is questioned. Seismic evidence obtained for the Bighorn uplift, Wyoming, obtained by the EarthScope Bighorn project, shows an upwarp of the Moho beneath, but oblique to the trend of the surface exposure of the basement arch. Both the surface and Moho exhibit approximately the same structural relief. The seismic data exhibit no evidence for a regionally continuous decollement, nor is there evidence of rotation of structural markers within these features, of the type that is observed in the detached fold-and-thrust belt. The intraplate region affected by long-wavelength folding includes western Wyoming, with continuation of some features across the E-W-oriented Cheyenne belt (e.g., Rock Springs-Douglas Creek arch), Colorado Plateau, and High Plains east of the Rocky Mountains, where surface and subsurface structures display a series of anticlinal arches ("plains-type" folds). Appalachian mountain building also caused long-wavelength folding, with a spacing consistent with lithospheric buckling, mostly associated with the Devonian Acadian orogeny. The Laramide arches in the High Plains seem to occur on arches inherited from the Appalachian orogeny, suggesting the permanence of these lithospheric buckles once they have formed.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.T54A..08T
- Keywords:
-
- 8110 Continental tectonics: general;
- TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8159 Rheology: crust and lithosphere;
- TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8169 Sedimentary basin processes;
- TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8175 Tectonics and landscape evolution;
- TECTONOPHYSICS