Geological-logo
Geological-logo

Atlas of Syntectonic sediments

Syntectonic deposition

This category is a bit different to the other Atlas collections. It does not refer to a specific environmental state, like fluvial or submarine fan, but to erosion, deposition, and deformation associated with active tectonics. This includes uplift, folding, faulting, the erosion of landscapes created by each of these, and subsequent deposition. Syntectonic deposits may be constrained in time to specific events (e.g. faulting), or to periods of mountain building, or other modes of deformation along plate boundaries. Classic examples include the Molasse of central Europe, and basins outboard of the Cordilleran fold and thrust belt in western Canada.

Most of the images here are inferred to have been associated with specific tectonic events. Conglomerate facies are common in fluvial and alluvial settings in close proximity to active faults and uplifts (Eurekan Orogeny in the Canadian Arctic, Alberta Foreland Basin, evolving transform faults in Ridge Basin, and active extension – strike slip faulting in Death Valley), to deep marine turbidites that were also influenced by active (Waitemata) basin tectonics. There’s also a few shots of coastal exposure of an active accretionary prism on New Zealand’s east coast.

Eurekan orogeny, Canadian Arctic

Alberta foreland basin

Waitemata Basin, Auckland

The northern segment of Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin (Auckland) developed atop a moving slab of obducted lithosphere – the Northland Allochthon. The Allochthon, now fragmented, consists of ophiolite (including possible seamounts), marls, terrigenous clastics and limestones. Allochthon rocks, like those shown here (Algies Bay) commonly are intensely deformed. Movement of the Allochthon is implicated in some of the syn-sedimentary – weak rock deformation in Waitemata Basin itself.

Ridge Basin, California

Death Valley

Active accretionary prism, Waimarama, NZ

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives
Categories
dip and strike compass
Measuring dip and strike
sandstone classification header
Classification of sandstones
Calcite cemented subarkose, Proterozoic Altyn Fm. southern Alberta
Sandstones in thin section
poles to bedding great circles
Stereographic projection – poles to planes
froude-reynolds-antidunes-header-768x439-1
Fluid flow: Froude and Reynolds numbers
Stokes Law for particle settling in a schematic context of other fluid flow functions
Fluid flow: Stokes Law and particle settling
sedimentary-basins-distribution-1-768x711
Classification of sedimentary basins
Model are representational descriptions are written in different languages - diagrammatic, descriptive, mathematical, and conceptual. They commonly contain variables and dimensionless quantities that permit quantitative analysis of the physical systems the models represent.
Geological models
Recent Posts
Claudine picardet w Lavoisier
Claudine Picardet (1735-1820)
etymology text box
Etymology of Earth science words and phrases
Elizabeth Philpot photo
Elizabeth Philpot (1779-1857)
XES 02 slice 1520 -3 blank
Experimental sequence stratigraphy:  model results
XES 02 slice 1520 full
Experimental sequence stratigraphy:  model attributes
Charlotte Murchison photo
Charlotte Murchison (1788-1869)
seds bedload modern dunes curisoity PIA20755
Evidence for bedload deposition on Mars
Carlotta Maury photo
Carlotta Maury (1874-1938)
seds curiosity panorama PIA24937-1
Mars orbiter and lander missions
seds jezero crater and delta in 3D
Evidence for sedimentary rocks on Mars
Scroll to Top