GSA Connects 2023 Meeting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Paper No. 137-2
Presentation Time: 2:00 PM

LITHOSPHERIC VARIATIONS ALONG THE OUACHITA OROGENIC BELT


MICKUS, Kevin, Geology, Missouri State University, Springfield, MO 65897, THOMAS, William A., Astris Advisors (UK) Limited, 8th Floor, 71 Queen Victoria Street, London, EC4V 4AY, United Kingdom; Emeritus University of Kentucky, Geological Survey of Alabama, P.O. Box 869999, Tuscaloosa, AL 35486-6999 and KELLER, G. Randy, College of Earth and Energy, University of Oklahoma, 100 East Boyd, Suite N131, Norman, OK 73019

To investigate the lithospheric structure of the Ouachita orogenic belt and how it varies across from the eastern US to west Texas, we have complied and integrated different data sets to produce a set of lithospheric scale transects that cross this orogenic belt. The key transect is based on the PASSCAL wide-angle reflection/refraction experiment that extended from the Ouachita Mountains in Arkansas to the Sabine uplift in Louisiana. This experiment imaged the Iapetan rifted margin and showed that it was not strongly deformed. It also revealed a thick mass of Ouachita facies sedimentary rocks above transitional or oceanic crust outboard of the rifted margin of Laurentia The final transects are presented as gravity models but they are constrained by the available seismic reflection/refraction, magnetic, well and geological data. Our integrated models and geologic constraints show that the Appalachian and Ouachita orogenic belts were formed during assembly of Pangea (by ~270 Ma) and were put onto the Iapetan rifted margin by collisions with arcs, exotic terranes, and other continents. They also show that the sinuous curves of the Appalachian-Ouachita orogen mimic the shape of the Iapetan rifted margin and subsequent passive-margin shelf edge. Our results show that all around the Ouachita thrust belt, imbricated continental slope facies (in an accretionary prism at the leading edge of an arc complex) were thrust onto the continental shelf. Our models indicate that the Ouachita orogeny appear to be the results of soft collisions that have left the pre-orogenic rifted margins largely intact and reflect the complex interactions of compressional and strike-slip deformation.