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Titel Influence of the strength of the crust on mountain building processes
VerfasserIn S. Jammes, R. S. Huismans
Konferenz EGU General Assembly 2012
Medientyp Artikel
Sprache Englisch
Digitales Dokument PDF
Erschienen In: GRA - Volume 14 (2012)
Datensatznummer 250060635
 
Zusammenfassung
The deep crustal structure of many orogens is now accessible owing to deep seismic reflection profiles combined with other geophysical methods. The diversity of observed orogenic crustal structures suggests that deformation processes that account for the formation of mountain belts differ from region to region. A range of parameters, including surface process efficiency and lithospheric scale inheritance, may provide a control on the structural style of mountain building. The relative importance of these controls is, however, still unclear. Numerous studies show that the relative strength of the frictional-plastic and viscous rheologies in the crust and mantle lithosphere provides a first order control on the deformation processes in extensional and contractional setting. Since, the strength of the crust and the mantle is strongly influenced by the temperature, the thickness and the composition of the crust and mantle lithosphere, and by inherited weaknesses, it strongly depends on the geodynamic setting. It is consequently expected to be different from one orogen to another and might explain the diversity of deformation styles. An idea that needs to be further investigated. We use 2D thermo-mechanical models at lithospheric scale to study the effect of the strength of the upper/middle crust on the geometry of contractional systems. Moreover, if many orogens result from the inversion of rifting basins little is known about the effect of rift inheritance during inversion tectonics. The formation of rift basin or passive margin is consequently explicitly modeled and the results are then used as initial condition for lithospheric scale inversion, a procedure, which we call accordion tectonics. Model results are compared to the Zagros, the Alps and the Pyrenees for which the crustal structure is well constrained by geophysical data.