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Abstract

(Begin page 1847)

AAPG Bulletin, V. 85, No. 10 (October 2001), P. 1847-1869.

Copyright ©2001. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

Mushwad: Ductile duplex in the Appalachian thrust belt in Alabama

William A. Thomas1

1Department of Geological Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506-0053; email: [email protected]

AUTHORS

William A. Thomas is Hudnall Professor of Geological Sciences at the University of Kentucky. He holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in geology from the University of Kentucky and a Ph.D. in geology from Virginia Polytechnic Institute. After a few years in the petroleum industry with The California Company (Chevron), he has held faculty appointments at Birmingham-Southern College, Queens College of the City University of New York, Georgia State University, the University of Alabama, and the University of Kentucky. His primary research interests are in tectonics and stratigraphy.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Acknowledgement is made to the Donors of The Petroleum Research Fund (33390), administered by the American Chemical Society, for partial support of this research. A grant from the National Science Foundation (EAR-9706735) supported part of this research. W. Edward Osborne of the Geological Survey of Alabama has generously provided outcrop data and has stimulated my thinking through many discussions. German Bayona assisted in balancing the Previous HitcrossNext Hit Previous HitsectionsNext Hit and in design and preparation of the illustrations. Helpful reviews of various drafts of the manuscript by J. Kaspar Arbenz, James A. Drahovzal, Robert D. Hatcher Jr., Hans P. Laubscher, Robert C. Milici, Kieran O'Hara, and especially Wesley K. Wallace are gratefully acknowledged. The name "mushwad" was inspired by a conversation with William R. Muehlberger.

ABSTRACT

Previous HitStructuralNext Hit style in thin-skinned thrust belts is controlled substan tially by the stratigraphic succession and relative thicknesses of lith otectonic units (stiff layers and weak layers). In contrast to the rela tively predictable geometry of fault-related folds (fault-bend folds, fault-propagation folds, and detachment folds), ductile deformation of a stratigraphically thick weak layer generates a ductile duplex that elevates and distorts the overlying stiff layer. A ductile duplex is herein termed a "mushwad" (Malleable, Unctuous SHale, Weak-layer Accretion in a Ductile duplex). In the Appalachian thrust belt in Alabama, mushwads nucleated in a thick, shale-dominated suc cession of weak rocks in association with basement faults beneath the regional decollement. The stiff-layer roof is deformed by folds and faults and is elevated by tectonic accretion of weak rocks in a mushwad. Shortening within the mushwad may drive translation of the stiff layer from the roof over the foreland. Lateral termina tions range from plunge of the stiff-layer roof over a laterally thin ning mushwad to a transverse fault. The examples in the Appala chian thrust belt suggest a style of structure that may be more common than presently recognized. The Previous HitstructuralNext Hit geometry of a mushwad, as well as the potential for concentration of fractures in the distorted stiff layer, suggests important applications in petro leum exploration and reservoir development.

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