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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 67 (1983)

Issue: 3. (March)

First Page: 427

Last Page: 427

Title: Thermal-Mechanical Modeling of Early Paleozoic Miogeoclinal Sequences in Southern Canadian Rockies: ABSTRACT

Author(s): Gerard C. Bond, Michelle A. Kominz

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

We have applied 2-dimensional thermal-mechanical stretching models to palinspastically restored sections of the early Paleozoic miogeocline in the southern Canadian Rocky Mountains. Results of modeling suggest that the miogeocline consists of an inner easterly tapering wedge of mainly carbonate rocks over 200 km (124 mi) wide in which early Paleozoic tectonic subsidence was controlled mainly by thermal contraction as predicted by the passive margin model for the miogeocline. To the west lies a complex and much wider belt of uplifted, carbonate platforms and downfaulted shale-filled basins in which subsidence was episodic and probably controlled by recurrent movement along high angle or listric normal faults. The boundary between the two belts is the Kicking Horse Rim, a n rrow northwest-trending reeflike tract of stacked algal complexes. Preliminary analyses of early Paleozoic miogeoclinal strata north and south of the southern Canadian Rockies suggest that these belts can be traced through most of the Cordilleran miogeocline.

We have analyzed stratigraphic relations within the inner carbonate belt east of the Kicking Horse Rim using one- and Previous HittwoNext Hit-Previous HitlayerNext Hit stretching models that include lateral heat flow and time-space dependent flexure. Each model was applied to three palinspastically restored cross sections of Upper Cambrian to Upper Ordovician strata restored to their original thicknesses and densities through time using delithification procedures we have developed for fully compacted lithologies in ancient basins. Both models (1) produce the overall shape of the carbonate wedge, (2) imply that thermal subsidence could not have begun earlier than about 550 to 600 m.y. ago, and (3) suggest an eustatic rise and fall occurred between Middle Cambrian and Middle Ordovician time. However, the widespread sub-Cambri n unconformity and the rapid eastward pinch-out of Early Cambrian strata within the carbonate wedge can be produced only by the Previous HittwoNext Hit-Previous HitlayerNext Hit model. In addition, lateral heat flow predicted by the two models at the outer edge of the carbonate wedge causes a small uplift whose position and timing could account for the sub-Middle Cambrian unconformity beneath the Kicking Horse Rim and shoaling required for growth of the algal complexes of the rim itself.

Both models imply that a hinge zone (zone separating crust thinned by stretching from crust of normal thickness) trended northward and lay close to the restored position of the McConnell thrust at about 52° lat. To the south at about 51° the hinge zone bends westward and at about 50° it lies along the west-trending St. Marys-Dibble Creek fault zone. We suggest that west-trending middle Precambrian high angle faults recognized along the St. Marys-Dibble Creek Zone controlled the position of a west-trending reentrant in the early Paleozoic margin. Between 52° and 51° the position of the hinge zone on a palinspastically restored base coincides closely with a distinct step in the depth to Moho indicated by Previous HitrefractionTop data. This relation may indicate that fundament l crustal structures of rifted margins such as hinge zones can be preserved in Moho topography over geologically long periods of time even where subsequent compressional events have occurred.

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