Tag Archives: synsedimentary deformation

Atlas of syntectonic sediments

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Syntectonic sediments – sediments associated with active tectonism

The Atlas, as are all blogs, is a publication. If you use the images, please acknowledge their source (it is the polite, and professional thing to do).

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. Syn-tectonic 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.

This link will take you to an explanation of the Atlas series, the ownership, use and acknowledgment of images.  There, you will also find links to the other categories.

Click on the image for an expanded view, then ‘back page’ arrow to return to the Atlas.

 

The images:

                      

Diabase sills intrude Jurassic through Permian successions in the Arctic Sverdrup Basin. Unroofing of these older rocks during the Eurekan Orogeny (climaxing about mid Eocene) provided large volumes of coarse sediment to alluvial fans, braided and high sinuosity rivers. In these two examples the Stolz Thrust is at the base of slope, with tectonic transport to the right (east). Here, the older rocks have been thrust over the syntectonic deposits (Buchanan Lake Fm.). Axel Heiberg Island.

 

                  

 

Stolz Thrust at Geodetic Hills (the site of the Middle Eocene Fossil Forest). Left: Diabase sills are thrust over syntectonic conglomerate. Right: Upturned and sheared Triassic rocks in the hanging wall; the fault trace is located in the depression (upper left).

 

Detail of shear and boudinage of Triassic sandstone-mudstone in Stolz Thrust zone, Geodetic Hills.  Location is the right image above.

 

 

 

 

Stolz Thrust, with Permo-Triassic rocks in the hanging wall (including slivers of anhydrite), over middle Eocene syntectonic conglomerate and sandstone (Buchanan Lake Fm.) North of Whitsunday Bay, Axel Heiberg Island.  Coarse-grained sediment was shed from the uplifted older rocks, and subsequently over-ridden by continued thrusting.

 

 

Intensely deformed anhydrite in the hanging wall of Stolz Thrust, Axel Heiberg Island. It is likely anhydrite debris was shed with the coarse sediment, but did not survive the first cycle of transport and deposition.

 

 

 

 

                          

Left: Syntectonic conglomerate (Buchanan Lake Fm.) over-thrust by Ordovician limestone (that also contributed debris to the conglomerate), Franklin Pierce Bay, Ellesmere Island. Right: Syntectonic conglomerate-sandstone braided river deposits that accumulated outboard of faulted uplifts. Boulder Hills, Ellesmere Island.

 

                          

Panorama of Jurassic-Triassic rocks above Stolz Thrust over syntectonic conglomerate at Geodetic Hills (Buchanan Lake Fm.), Axel Heiberg Island (left), and a compositional unroofing sequence in conglomerate (right). The lighter coloured deposits near the base of conglomerate were derived from Jurassic sandstones. the progressive change upward to darker brown conglomerate reflects access to deeper, older Triassic sandstone and diabase sills in the eroding hanging wall.

 

                               

Aerial views of Middle Eocene, syntectonic alluvial fan – braidplain conglomerate outboard of thrusted uplands. Left: Emma Fiord, Ellesmere Island. Right: Geodetic Hills, Axel Heiberg Island.

 

Small thrust fault through proximal, bouldery, syntectonic conglomerate, Geodetic Hills, Axel Heiberg Island.  Hammer lower center. Boulders to 50cm wide.

 

 

 

 

                             

Syntectonic boulder-cobble (mostly diabase) proximal alluvial fan deposits, with scattered sand wedges, Geodetic Hills, Axel Heiberg Island. At the time of deposition, they would have been close to the uplifted source rocks.

 

Thick, crudely bedded debris flows and sheet flood alluvial fan conglomerates, probably close to sediment source. Diabase clasts up to a metre wide. Middle Eocene, Geodetic Hills, Axel Heiberg Island.

 

 

 

 

Lower Paleozoic carbonates have been thrust over Upper Cretaceous foreland basin strata (approximately east-dipping bedding visible at top right), Kananaskis, Alberta Basin. The U. Cretacous units accumulated during an earlier phase of thrusting, farther west, and then subsquently over-ridden.

 

 

 

                          

Left: older foreland basin deposits (Kootenay Gp), overlain by conglomerate, shed from a renewed phase of thrusting and folding (resistant units at top) – The Lower Cretaceous Cadomin Fm. interpreted variously as braidplain, alluvial fan, and pediment. Right: Trough crossbedded, pebbly sandstone, Cadomin Fm.

 

Interbedded conglomerate-sandstone, mostly as planar tabular crossbeds. Cadomin Fm. Mt Allan, Kananaskis.

 

 

 

 

 

Lower Cretaceous foreland basin strata involved in a later phase of thrusting. View is to the north of Highwood Pass. Lewis Thrust charges down the valley beyond. Front Ranges, Alberta Foreland basin.

 

 

 

 

                          

Iconic views of the Front Ranges, Kananaskis. Left: Upturned Lower Paleozoic carbonates and sandstones, and in the valley, recessive Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous foreland basin strata. Right: Probably one of the most photographed fold pairs in Canada – Lewis Thrust terminates at the base of this fold pair. Kananaskis Highway.

 

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. This view shows thrusted marls, north of Algies Bay.

                            

Examples of intense shearing in Northland Allochthon marls and mudstones. Left: multiple generations of fracturing. Right: Boudinage and shear of siderite nodules in the mudrocks (above). Algies Bay, Auckland.

 

 

Sedimentary dyke through Northland Allochthon mudrocks. The dyke contains fragments of Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin sandstone and mudstone, attesting to the dynamic relationship between the two.  The dyke in turn is fractured by later deformation. Algies Bay, Auckland.

 

 

 

                           

Examples of soft and weak-rock deformation – slumping in Waitemata Basin turbidites, possibly dynamically linked to Northland Allochthon deformation. Left: Thrust-folds near Waiwera. Right: Recumbent isoclinal folds, and rotated boudins in sandstone, Army Bay.

 

Intensely folded and faulted turbidites above an undeformed glide plane, south of Orewa Beach, possibly dynamically linked to Northland Allochthon deformation.

 

 

 

 

                          

Violin Breccia, Ridge Basin, California. fault plane talus, and or debris flows, adjacent San Gabriel Fault, a Late Miocene splay of the evolving San Andreas transform. Breccia clasts are mainly gneiss. The breccia extends many km along the fault strand, but only about 2km down-dip into the basin.

 

                             

Left: Lacustrine shoreface – delta sandstone, and stringers of Violin Breccia. Right: detail of the left image, showing crossbedded sandstone and grit-pebble sized material from the Violin Breccia. Ridge Basin, California.

 

                          

Left: down dip view of dissected Panamint Range alluvial fan, Death Valley. The coarse fan deposits reflect erosion of the uplifted Panamint metamorphic core complex.  The fan canyon-head is shown in the right image.

 

                         

Hole in the Wall, Death Valley. Here, lacustrine sands and muds contain sporadic debris flows (resistant unit). Right image shows debris flow scours. They accumulated during Miocene-Pliocene extension  that resulted in Death Valley basin subsidence. Subsequent deformation took place as the Furnace Creek strike-slip fault created an en echelon stack of fan deltas and associated lacustrine deposits.

 

                            

Hole in the Wall, Death Valley. Discordant packages of lacustrine shoreface and prodelta mudstone-sandstone, and pebble conglomerate. The debris flow in the images above can be traced from the lower right to the central part of the cliff.

 

                          

Hole in the Wall, Death Valley. Lacustrine silt and clay, in prodelta or basin floor. The right image shows small grit-filled scours from periodic influxes down the prodelta slope.

 

                          

Coastal exposure of an active accretionary prism, Waimarama, eastern North Island. The accretionary prism here consists of telescoped slivers of sea-floor sediment, above Hikurangi subduction zone.  Left: Thrusts and associated shearing in bentonitic mudrocks, sandstones, and marls (arrows), looking north. Right: Looking south at similar lithologies, and the modern expression of sedimentation associated with the deformation – a cobble beach.

 

Closer view of thrusts and intensely sheared mudstone-sandstone melange, Waimarama, eastern North Island.

 

 

 

 

 

                             

Sheared and stretched sandstone (left), and sheared bentonitic melange (right), within thin, accretionary prism thrust sheets, Waimarama, eastern North Island.

 

A lozenge of resistant cherty mudstone within the softer bentonitic melange, detached during thrusting, Waimarama, eastern North Island.

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Atlas of synsedimentary deformation

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Synsedimentary oversteepening and loading of ripples

Deformation of sediment while it is soft or semi-consolidated

The Atlas, as are all blogs, is a publication. If you use the images, please acknowledge their source as indicated below (it is the polite, and professional thing to do).

 

Deformation of sediment while it is soft or semi-consolidated, is common. The rock record is replete with folded and slumped strata, strata that slid in coherent packages, strata that lose their coherence during liquefaction or fluidization, displacement by faults where soft or plastic sediment seemingly acts like its brittle rock counterparts, or dyke-like injections where sediment is locally overpressured.

The term syn-sedimentary tends to be used rather loosely, as deformation that takes place during or soon after deposition; the ‘soon’ is the loose part of this broad definition. Sediment begins to compact almost immediately following deposition, where framework grains begin to move closer together.  Interstitial water is expelled, and this process in itself can deform the sediment. Water expulsion in compacting deeper strata can also increase local pore pressures that in turn reduce sediment shear strength. Other common triggers are gravitational instability  and seismic tremors. Coastal storm surges can produce instability in sea floor sediments caused by rapid fluctuations in pore pressure.

This link will take you to an explanation of the Atlas series, the ownership, use and acknowledgment of images.  There, you will also find links to the other categories.

Click on the image for an expanded view, then ‘back page’ arrow to return to the Atlas.

Five of the images shown in this tranche also appear in the Submarine fans and channels category; there are several more examples of soft- or syn-sedimentary structures on the Submarine fans page.

Check out this post for brief descriptions of deformation mechanisms and annotation of outcrop images.

The images:

Sediment deposited rapidly will have a high water content.  Immediately following deposition and incipient compaction, excess water will be forced towards the sea floor.  Muddy sediment, like a turbidite will present natural permeability barriers to water expulsion, resulting in either deformation of laminae and other structures, or formation of dewatering pipes, or pillars.  Water escaping at the sea floor will deposit fine sediment that it has picked up along its trajectory, and deposit this as small mud-silt pimples or volcanoes.  This example (Omarolluk Fm, Proterozoic, Belcher Islands) shows the mud volcanoes on bedding, and in cross-section, thin whitish pillars that represent water escape routes – they are white because the muddy matrix has been removed.

Dewatering pillars can occur in sheets within single beds, in this case a Proterozoic turbidite. The position of sheets within a bed is probably associated with permeability barriers. Omarolluk Fm. Belcher Islands (1.8-1.9 billion years). The black patches are calcite concretions; pillars pass through the concretions.

 

 

 

                       

Calcite concretions in turbidites, Omarolluk Fm, Belcher Islands, formed during very early stages of burial.  This very early stage of diagenesis was shallow enough for the concretions to be reworked in submarine channels.

                          

Dish structures are another product of dewatering. Water that escapes though narrow conduits, will drag sand laminae upwards; laminae between adjacent dewatering pillars will appear concave upwards, or dish-shaped. Left is from Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin, Musick Point; Right is from the Rosario Group, San Diego.

Fluvial trough crossbeds here have been turned on end during early compaction and dewatering, producing what are commonly called ball and pillow structure.  Proterozoic Loaf Fm. Belcher Islands.

 

 

 

 

Ripples and bed contacts in this sandstone-mudstone unit have been deformed by liquefaction, and in places pulled apart.  Evidence from nearby strata indicates a possible seismic event has jostled these beds (see image below). Fairweather Fm, Belcher Islands, about 2 billion years old.

 

 

This sandstone dyke terminates in, and probably breached shallow intertidal deposits.  The surrounding layers have been dragged upwards during sand intrusion.  Structures like this  commonly form during earthquakes when soft sediment is liquefied.  Fairweather Fm, Belcher Islands, about 2 billion years old.

 

 

Detached load casts in laminated, locally rippled volcaniclastics. Flaherty (volcanic) Fm, Belcher Islands, about 2 billion years old.

 

 

 

 

A sandstone dyke that originated from deformed – slumped sandy turbidites; the dyke intrudes a slope mudstone-siltstone succession, and extends about 40m up the exposed face.  Both the slumping and sandstone intrusion are thought to have formed during a seismic event. Upper Jurassic, Tsatia Mt, Bowser Basin.

 

 

 

                             

Dololutite beds deformed while in a plastic state, are interbedded with undeformed crossbedded (dolomitic) grainstone.  These folds probably formed as packages of sediment were moved during karstification. Some layers have detached from one another, forming voids that were eventually filled by aragonite-fibrous calcite – subsequently converted to dolomite. Both images from the Rowatt Fm, Belcher Islands, about 2 billion years old.

Detached folds in ice-contact glacial outwash. Elevated pore pressures and deformation were probably caused by ice loading. Late Pleistocene, Ottawa.

 

 

 

 

                               

Classic folded, faulted, and detached turbidite beds, caused by sliding, slumping, syn-depositional faulting, and some liquefaction.  Left; Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin, Army Bay, Right: Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin Manly Beach, Auckland.

 

                                

Classic folded, faulted, and detached turbidite beds, caused by sliding, slumping, synsedimentary faulting, and local liquefaction.  Left; Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin, Takapuna Beach , Auckland. Right: highway roadcut, Albany, Auckland.

 

Small, detached slump fold carried along the base of a turbidity current. Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin, Cockle Bay, Auckland

 

 

 

 

Detached slump folded dololutite-calcilutite. These thin carbonate beds were deposited on a Proterozoic slope (Costello Fm. Belcher Islands), outboard of really large, platform stromatolite reefs.

 

 

 

 

Folded, and possibly thrust faulted turbidites, above which are undisturbed beds.  Lower Miocene Waitemata Basin, Pukenihinihi Point, north Auckland.

 

 

 

 

                             

Slump folds in Late Miocene Castaic Fm, Ridge Basin turbidites, probably initiated by seismic events on the bounding San Gabriel strike-slip fault, that was an offshoot of the evolving San Andreas transform system. Left: a fold pair.  Right: folding, pull-apart, and small accommodation faults.

Folding and intrusion of liquefied sand in the Rosario Group, San Diego

 

 

 

 

Large recumbent slump fold in a Late Miocene basin floor submarine fan, Mt. Messenger Formation, North Taranaki, New Zealand.

 

 

 

 

 

                             

Seriously deformed and detached slumps, boudinage, and slides in Late Miocene, basin floor submarine fan, Mt. Messenger Formation, North Taranaki, New Zealand. Strata below the detachment are not deformed.

 

Detail of deformation associated with slumping – here, boudinage and tight recumbent folds in dark brown sandstone layers. Late Miocene, basin floor submarine fan, Mt. Messenger Formation, North Taranaki, New Zealand.

 

 

 

The iconic ‘Jam Roll’ slump in Late Miocene, basin floor submarine fan, Mt. Messenger Formation, North Taranaki, New Zealand. Folded sandstone-mudstone almost completely encloses the structure.

 

 

 

 

                             

Detail of liquefaction and dewatering structures in the Jam Roll slump. Left: a modest size mud volcano. Right: Highly fluid mud layers that were squeezed during liquefaction. Late Miocene, basin floor submarine fan, Mt. Messenger Formation, North Taranaki, New Zealand.

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