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Announcements Cottonwood exercise and homework are due on Thursday The project for those who missed the field trip is now available online- deadline for.

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Presentation on theme: "Announcements Cottonwood exercise and homework are due on Thursday The project for those who missed the field trip is now available online- deadline for."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Announcements Cottonwood exercise and homework are due on Thursday The project for those who missed the field trip is now available online- deadline for that is Tuesday March 25, in class (no extensions!, zero credit after deadline)

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4 Cottonwood trip- a few thoughts

5 Changes in dips? How can you explain them?

6 Definitely a fault; what kind?

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8 Need to think about cross- section

9 Strike-slip fault systems (D&R: 357-371) 1. Tectonic settings and significance 2. Geometries 3. Active strike-slip faults- 4. mineralization + petroleum

10 At the scale of plate tectonics, transform (strike-slip) plate boundaries are subordinate to convergent and divergent plate margins- but they play a critical role

11 oceanic (ridge-ridge) transform faults, revisited

12 Continental strike-slip faults- the San Andreas

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15 How deep should earthquakes be within an active strike-slip fault? Down to the brittle-ductile transition

16 The Alpine fault in New Zealand transfers slip between two subduction zones (trench-trench transform)

17 The North Anatolian fault-rupture near Izmit last September.

18 Major active continental strike-slip faults in Asia

19 tectonic extrusion or escape hypothesis

20 Strike-slip faults can transfer slip between different thrust or extensional systems

21 Strain can be partitioned into different styles of fault systems-

22 Strain partitioning in oblique convergent margin settings

23 Fault traces are rarely straight- they can curve, branch, or be arranged en echelon. This leads to a wide variety of strike-slip related deformation

24 Transtension in releasing bends may lead to development of sag ponds and pull-apart basins

25 Restraining bends and transpressional deformation- folds and thrusts

26 The San Andreas bend near Los Angeles: thrusting related to strike-slip faulting

27 Many strike-slip fault systems are characterized by faults that converge downward and form flower structures compressional setting: "positive" or "palm tree" flower structure extensional setting: "negative" or "tulip" flower structure

28 Some flower structures look like duplexes turned on their side- strike-slip duplexes

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30 Riedel shears- especially common in strike-slip fault systems R: synthetic Riedel shear R': antithetic Riedel shear P: synthetic shear, subordinate to R and R' or absent

31 summary of strike-slip-related deformation

32 What is important about strike-slip faults and why do we care? 1. Many active strike-slip faults are associated with high slip rates, major earthquakes, and lithospheric plate boundaries 2. Oil and mineral exploration.

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35 Significance of strike-slip fault systems for oil

36 Many Archean and Phanerozoic mineral deposits (especially gold) are associated with zones of strike-slip deformation

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40 Important terminology/concepts ridge-ridge and trench-trench transform faults concept of continental extrusion or escape strike-slip faults as transfer faults strain partitioning oblique convergence releasing vs. restraining bend transpression vs. transtension sag ponds and pull-apart basins flower structures strike-slip duplexes right-stepping vs. left-stepping fault arrays folds in strike-slip zones Riedel shears


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