People | George
Davis
The Folding of Granite in Sierras Pampeanas
Evidence and Mechanisms for Folding of
Granite, Sierra de Hualfíin Basement-Cored Uplift, Northwest
Argentina
Sierra de Hualfín is a 22-km (14-mi)-long basement-cored uplift
with an approximately 66-km2 (26-mi2) exposure of the basement-cover
interface. The uplift is composed of Ordovician granite,
overlain by and locally thrust over Tertiary sedimentary rocks. The
geometry of the uplift is that of a faulted anticlinorium in granite
basement that is delineated by the basement unconformity. Detailed
mapping of the basement unconformity documents large-scale folding
of granite basement, the results of fault-propagation folding associated
with a thrust-fault tip initially located deep in the basement.
Our findings at Sierra de Hualfín indicate that homogeneous
granite can fold as a deformable body by stress-induced development
and/or exploitation of joints, faults, and fractures, and an unconformity-parallel
fracture foliation in the uppermost basement. Specifically, folding
is achieved through systematic coordinated movements involving (1)
reactivation of joints as faults and mode I fissures, (2) fracturing
and faulting near large displacement faults, and (3) flexural shear
of the uppermost basement. The extent to which joints, microfractures,
and fracture foliation are reactivated determines the deformability
of granite. At Sierra de Hualfín, the deformability of
granite is such that the folding of the basement is consistent with
trishear kinematics.
Our observations contradict standard models
of basement-cored uplifts that assume that the fault tip is located
at the basement-cover interface. We
postulate that the folded shape of Sierra de Hualfín and of
some uplifts in the Rocky Mountain foreland can be attributed to basement
distortion taking place in advance of a propagating fault tip below
the basement-cover unconformity.
[García, P.E. and Davis, G.H., 2004, Evidence and mechanism
for folding of granite, in Sierra de Haulfin basement-cored uplift,
northwest Argentina: American Association of Petroleum Geologists,
v. 88, no. 9, p. 1255-1276.]
|