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Depositional response to encroachment of Himalayan compressional and transpressional deformation on the northern Pakistan foreland

Posted on:1993-04-06Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Dartmouth CollegeCandidate:Pivnik, David AdamFull Text:PDF
GTID:1470390014996031Subject:Geology
Abstract/Summary:
Compressional and transpressional tectonics affected the northern Pakistan foreland region during the Miocene, Pliocene and Pleistocene. Sequences of the Upper Siwalik Group, exposed in the Peshawar Basin, Campbellpore Basin, Shinghar Range, Soan Syncline and Hazara Basin record the sedimentary response to the various deformational events that shaped the foreland. Three main episodes of deformation are recorded. The first, at ;The second episode, from ;The third episode, at ;Detailed mapping and seismic-data acquisition in the Kohat Plateau show that many of the structures in the Kohat Plateau, Potwar Plateau and the mountain ranges related to the Main Boundary thrust (Kohat, Attock-Cherat, Kala Chitta and Hazara-Margala Hill Ranges) are related to transpressional wrench faulting. Previous structural interpretations have used thin-skinned, imbricate thrust models to explain structures in the region. Instead, the foreland is a complex hybrid of compression-related and transpression-related structures. It is suggested that as the Himalayan deformational front impinged upon the foreland, thin-skinned thrusting along the Main Boundary thrust occurred in the Miocene, with the sedimentary wedge decoupled from basement. As convergence progressed, basement became involved in the deformation and wrench-related features overprinted previously-developed compressional structures. At present, the youngest deformation in the region, uplift of the Trans-Indus Salt Ranges, is characterized by thin-skinned, imbricated thrusts which are offset by younger strike-slip faults.
Keywords/Search Tags:Foreland, Transpressional, Deformation, Region
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