z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Active surface salt structures of the western Kuqa fold-thrust belt, northwestern China
Author(s) -
Jianghai Li,
A. Alexander G. Webb,
Xiang Mao,
Ingrid Eckhoff,
Cindy Colón,
Kexin Zhang,
Honghao Wang,
Li A,
Dian He
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
geosphere
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.879
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 1553-040X
DOI - 10.1130/ges01021.1
Subject(s) - geology , diapir , evaporite , fold and thrust belt , anticline , fold (higher order function) , foreland basin , salt tectonics , geomorphology , thrust , fluvial , petrology , geochemistry , tectonics , paleontology , structural basin , mechanical engineering , engineering , physics , thermodynamics
© 2014 Geological Society of America. The western Kuqa fold-thrust belt of Xinjiang Province, China, hosts a series of surface salt structures. Here we present preliminary analysis of the geometry, kinematics, and surface processes of three of these structures: the Quele open-toed salt thrust sheet, Tuzimazha salt wall, and Awate salt fountain. The first two are line-sourced, the third appears to be point-sourced, and all are active. The ~35-km-long, 200-m-thick Quele open-toed salt thrust sheet features internal folding, salt-lined transfer structures, dissolution topography, flanking growth strata, and alluvial fan/stream-network interactions. The ~10-km-long, 50-m-wide Tuzimazha salt wall marks a local topographic high, such that fluvial stream networks are deflected by the rising weak tabular salt body. The salt wall is also flanked by growth strata and normal faults. The ~2-km-long Awate salt fountain represents salt exhumation coincident with the intersection of multiple structures and a river. Therefore this salt body may respond to local structural and/or erosional variations, or it may play a key role determining such variations-or both. Activity along all three structures confirms that active deformation occurs from foreland to hinterland across the western Kuqa fold-thrust belt. Gradual lateral transition from bedded strata to flow-banded halite observed within the Quele open-toed salt thrust sheet implies that similar transitions observed in seismic reflection data do not require interpretation as diapiric cut-offrelationships. The surface salt structures of the western Kuqa fold-thrust belt display a variety of erosiontectonics interactions, with nuances reflecting the low viscosity and high erodibility of salt, including stream deflections, potential tectonic aneurysm development, and even an upper-crustal test site for channel flow-focused denudation models.Link_to_subscribed_fulltex

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom