2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 2:00 PM

STRAIN RATE IN A TURBIDITE FOLD-THRUST BELT IN THE SOUTHWESTERN LACHLAN OROGEN, AUSTRALIA


FOSTER, David A., Department of Geological Sciences, University of Florida, PO Box 112120, Gainesvile, FL 32611 and GRAY, David R., Earth Sciences, Univ of Melbourne, Melbourne, 3010, dafoster@ufl.edu

Deformation of a turbidite dominated, accretionary-style thrust wedge in the southwestern Lachlan Orogen, Australia occurred by chevron folding and faulting over an eastward propagating decollement. Based on 40Ar/39Ar dates of white micas that grew below the isotopic closure temperature, this deformation started at ~457 Ma in the west and ended at ~378 Ma in the east, with apparent “pulses” of deformation at about 440, 420 and 388 Ma. 40Ar/39Ar data from the thrust sheets in the western part of this fold-thrust belt show that deformation progressed from early buckle folding, which started at 457-455 Ma through to chevron fold lock-up and thrusting at 440-439 Ma. The total average strain for this thrust system is -0.67, based on retrodeformation and strain removal. This amount of strain accumulated over a duration of ~16 Ma gives a minimum strain rate of 1.3 x 10-15 s-1 and a maximum strain rate of 5.5 x 10-15 s-1, based on the calculated thickness of the sediment. The total shortening for western thrust sheets is ~310 km (minimum) and ~800 km (maximum), which gives a décollement propagation rate between ~19 mm a-1 (minimum) and ~55 mm a-1 (maximum). A similar, but less well defined, strain rate is calculated from the thrust sheets in eastern part of the fold-thrust belt. These strain rates are on the low end for plate tectonic rates but similar to convergence rates in western Pacific back arc basins, accretionary prisms, and in turbidite-dominated thrust systems.