Strain Partitioning and Localization Due To Detachment Heterogeneities in Fold-and-Thrust Belts of Progressive Arcs: Results From Analog Modeling
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Wiley
Date
2022-11-16Referencia bibliográfica
Jiménez-Bonilla, A... [et al.] (2022). Strain partitioning and localization due to detachment heterogeneities in fold-and-thrust belts of progressive arcs: Results from analog modeling. Tectonics, 41, e2021TC006955. [https://doi.org/10.1029/2021TC006955]
Sponsorship
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (Spanish Government)/AEI/ERDF PGC2018-100914-B-I00; Universidad Pablo de Olavide/CBUA; Universidad Pablo de Olavide - Consejeria de Economia, Conocimiento, Companias y Universidad (Andalusian Government)/ERDFAbstract
Although most arcuate orogens are deformed as progressive arcs—curvature is acquired during
shortening-, they have been scarcely simulated by analog modeling. To investigate factors that control the
growth of progressive curves in fold-and-thrust belts, we developed seven analog models where the backstop
shape changed over time, and distinctive geometric heterogeneities were set in the detachment layer. These
heterogeneities, often described in natural cases, include diapirs, thickness lateral variations (including
pinch-outs) of the viscous detachment layer as well as frontal pinch-outs. Our results show that strain was
partitioned between shortening structures showing radial transport directions, and both normal and oblique
strike-slip faults that accommodated arc-lengthening. The location of any heterogeneity conditioned the
nucleation of structures and thus, the wedge evolution and its resulting geometry. The presence of both diapirs
and frontal silicone pinch-outs favored the stagnation of the deformation front, and the subsequent wedge
thickening up to reach the supercritical angle. Both diapirs and thickness lateral variations of the viscous layer
localized arc-parallel stretching. In addition, their configuration determined the amount and distribution of
salients and recesses along the arcuate belt, diapirs and more frictional detachments favoring thicker wedges
and less frontal propagation. The differential displacement between salients and recesses was accommodated by
strongly partitioned transfer zones, localized by the boundaries between distinctive detachment domains. These
results may be useful to investigate geometric and kinematic changes along natural progressive arcs such as the
Gibraltar, Sulaiman and Zagros cases.