RATES OF SOLUTION OF DIFFERENT ROCKS AFFECT CROSS SECTIONS
Here is a hypothetical case. A quartzite conglomerate glued to the basement might lose only a few percent of its volume in the same time that the overlying calcareous shale loses several tens of percent. The third stratigraphic unit, limestone, might have 20% gone, give or take 20%. The salt on top deforms so interestingly that it surely deserves Bill Thomas's word MUSHWAD, but how much volume is gone is indeterminate. The top unit, quartz siltstone, dissolves several times faster than the basal quartzite conglomerate, but that leaves tens of percent in doubt. These dissolution rates and amounts can be measured, at least in some places in some tectonic belts and at least to a first approximation, and thus should be evaluated in reconstructing and trying to retro-deform thrust belts.