PENNSYLVANIA SALIENT OF THE APPALACHIANS: A NEW MODEL FOR ITS ORIGIN BASED ON PIEDMONT DATA
The Alleghanian model proposed here involves a first-stage, eastern, mega-decollement that rose to the NNW as a series of flats and ramps. A minor N-directed push followed. Subsequently, massive Blue Ridge movements displaced this mega-sheet and much of the western foreland to the WNW. Along its northern edge, this second motion reactivated first-stage decollement -flats and utilized first-stage frontal ramps as partial lateral ramps. Absence of evaporites beneath the autochthonous Pocono Plateau produced trailing edge grabens and basins at the rear of the decollement. At the level of Silurian evaporites, this extension dropped previously folded portions of the sheet to form the Lackawana synclinorioum; displacement westward was accommodated largely by layer-parallel-shortening. Farther south, deeper level decollements dropped and cross-folded the broader Southern Anthracite basins while dissipating displacement westward as the Juniata / Nittany culminations. Downwarping not only preserved the anthracite basins but provided the added burial depth to help produce the anthracite. The model integrates transport patterns of both foreland and Piedmont, avoids the lack of tangential stretching problem, and accounts for many otherwise unexplained structural details of central Pennsylvania.