1. Active intracontinental transpressional mountain building in the Mongolian Altai: Defining a new class of orogen
- Author
-
Dickson Cunningham
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Crust ,Structural basin ,Transpression ,Craton ,Geophysics ,Mountain formation ,Sinistral and dextral ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Intraplate earthquake ,Epeirogenic movement ,Geology ,Seismology - Abstract
Mountain ranges that are actively forming around the western and northern perimeter of the Indo-Eurasia collisional deformational field, such as the Mongolian Altai, comprise a unique class of intracontinental intraplate transpressional orogen with structural and basinal elements that are distinct from contractional and extensional orogens. Late Cenozoic uplift and mountain building in the Mongolian Altai is dominated by regional-scale dextral strike–slip faults that link with thrust and oblique–slip faults within a 300-km-wide deforming belt sandwiched between the more rigid Junggar Basin block and Hangay Precambrian craton. Dominant orogenic elements in the Mongolian Altai include double restraining bends, terminal restraining bends, partial restraining bends, single thrust ridges, thrust ridges linked by strike–slip faults, and triangular block uplifts in areas of conjugate strike–slip faults. The overall pattern is similar to a regional strike–slip duplex array; however, the significant amount of contractional and oblique–slip displacement within the range and large number of historical oblique–slip seismic events renders the term “transpressional duplex” more accurate. Intramontane and range flanking basins can be classified as ramp basins, half-ramp basins, open-sided thrust basins, pull-apart basins, and strike–slip basins. Neither a classic fold-and-thrust orogenic wedge geometry nor a bounding foredeep exists. The manner in which upper crustal transpressional deformation is balanced in the lower crust is unknown; however, crustal thickening by lower crustal inflation and northward outflow of lower crustal material are consistent with existing geological and geodetic data and could account for late Cenozoic regional epeirogenic uplift in the Russian Altai and Sayan regions.
- Published
- 2005
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