Professional Documents
Culture Documents
ii
Dilip K. Mukhopadhyay
IIT Roorkee
iii
To
iv
Preface
Structural geology is obviously one of the more important subjects for geoscientists working in
petroleum industry. Folds and faults in deformed rocks make traps for hydrocarbon accumulation. Also,
large-scale deformations, the so-called tectonics, control the architecture of petroliferous sedimentary
basins. It is the primary job of a structural geologist to interpret geological map and field data, and infer
geometry of large scale folds and faults. However, geoscientists with varied specializations and working
with different kinds of data may also be called upon to make structural interpretations. For example,
lineament maps prepared from air photographs or satellite based images are commonly interpreted in
terms of crustal-scale deformation or seismologists working with seismic reflection profiles routinely
interpret subsurface structural geometry. It is imperative that geoscientists with different specializations
working in oil industries have basic working knowledge on structural geology. A number of excellent
textbooks on structural geology are now available but it appears that many a petroleum geoscientists are
reluctant to pick up any of these books. This is probably due to the fact that the scopes of these books are
much wider than the requirements of petroleum geoscientists. In this publication, the focus is on topics
that I think should be of common interest to most petroleum geologists and geophysicists. I hope this will
be particularly useful to those who did not have a thorough grounding in structural geology during their
college/university days. Also, students in a bachelor level structural geology course may find this book
useful. Detailed discussion on all the topics covered in this publication can be found in any standard
textbook on structural geology. A list of such textbooks is given in the reference section, copies of which
are on my desk all the time.
I am grateful to Dr. James Peters, Secretary, Association of Petroleum Geologists for his continuous
encouragement. But for his persistent demand that the manuscript be completed within a fixed time frame,
I would have taken eternity to finalize the same. Dr. Premanand Mishra, Dr. R. Krishnamurti and Mrs.
Mamata Gupta are thanked for reading the manuscript cover to cover and locating innumerable mistakes.
However, I alone remain responsible for the mistakes that escaped scrutiny. I am also grateful to my
friends and colleagues at IIT Roorkee (formerly University of Roorkee) who maintain a congenial
academic and social environment where individuals can tread the path of their choice. But for the full
support of my family, this publication would not see the light of the day.
Roorkee
05 September, 2006
Dilip K. Mukhopadhyay
Contents
1.
2.
3.
4
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Preface
Introduction
Planes and lines
Force and stress
Mohr circle
Strain
Stress-strain relation
Brittle fracture criteria
Faults: Morphology and classification
Thrust faults
Normal faults
Strike-slip faults
1-5
7-14
15-23
25-32
33-41
43-48
49-59
61-74
75-86
87-97
99-105
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
107-120
121-135
137-145
147-157
159-164
165-167
vi
1. Introduction
The rocks in many of the sedimentary basins with good prospect for hydrocarbon
reserves are highly deformed. The deformation is manifested by the presence of largescale faults and folds, some of which act not only as traps for hydrocarbon
accumulation but also control depositional systems of source, reservoir and seal facies.
Structural geology is the subject that deals with deformed rocks. It is one of the key
subjects in hydrocarbon exploration and research. A reliable interpretation of
subsurface structural geometry is essential for locating drill wells.
Structural geology is closely allied to engineering mechanics, fluid dynamics and
material science. There is, however, an important difference between engineering
mechanics and structural geology (Fig. 1.1). Most of the deformation processes in the
crust are very slow. As a result geological structures develop over long periods of time,
usually in millions of years. Further, most of the rocks are very highly heterogeneous
materials. Consequently, structures we see in nature are end products of very slow
deformation processes in highly heterogeneous materials. We try to interpret the
deformation process and the initial condition from the end product. In engineering
problems, one generally studies the effects of various deformation processes on
undeformed and relatively homogeneous materials.
Another serious problem in structural geology, indeed in most subjects in earth
sciences, is that we have to deal with incomplete, sometimes conflicting, data set.
Therefore, structural inferences are interpretative and non-unique, and require
validation. But unfortunately, there is a general lack of enthusiasm for validation of
structural inferences!
Initial
Final
Engineering
Structural geology
?
Figure 1.1. The difference between engineering mechanics and deformation in
the crust. In engineering mechanics, the effects of known stress systems on
initially homogeneous undeformed materials are usually studied. In structural
geology we see the end product of deformation in rocks, which are mostly
heterogeneous material. We try to infer the deformation process and initial
condition from the end product.
Also, three different types of studies are undertaken by structural geologists, viz.,
observational, experimental and theoretical.
We look at deformed rocks at different scales. Following terms are used to denote
approximate scale of observation of deformed rocks.
(a)
(b)
Figure 1.2. The faulting is not penetrative in larger scale (a) because it is not
uniformly developed but in the scale of outcrop (b) the same faulting is
penetrative.
can carry out geometric analysis in most of the deformed rocks but can carry out strain
measurements if we are very lucky to have strain markers. It is only in very rare cases it
is possible to do stress analysis.
Trend
Plunge
N (North)
Strike Strike line
C
Pitch
e
Lin
Plane
G
Dip
Strike line
Figure 2.1. Block diagram showing different terms used to describe attitude of
planes and lines.
Apparent dip: Inclination of a plane measured in any direction other than the
perpendicular direction to the strike line. The apparent dip is always less than
the dip (or true dip). Apparent dip in the direction of strike is always zero.
Pitch: We measure pitch (or rake) of a line that lies on a plane. Pitch is the angle
between the line and an imaginary horizontal line, both lying on the same
plane.
Let us consider a block ABCDEFGH in which ABCD and EFGH are horizontal
planes and the other four planes are vertical (Fig. 2.1). In this block, CDEF is the plane
of interest containing a line DF. The direction from A to D is the geographic north
direction. The lines CD and EF are the strike lines for the plane CDEF. The line AB is
the vertical projection of EF onto the horizontal plane ABCD. Note that the strike lines
CD and AB are parallel though the strike lines are at different elevations. The distance
between AB and CD is a function of dip of the plane, higher the dip smaller the
distance. The NDC is strike of the plane CDEF. Note that a strike line has two
bearings, 180 away from each other. The BCF (or ADE) is the dip (or true dip) of
the plane CDEF. The dip direction is D to A or C to B. The BDF is one possible
apparent dip of the plane CDEF. The BDF is the plunge of the line DF. Note that the
lines DB and DF are contained in the same vertical plane and DB is the vertical
projection of the line DF onto a horizontal plane. DB with bearing NDB is the trend of
the line DF. CDF is the pitch of the line DF measured from C side of the strike line
DC. It is important to remember that the terms strike and dip/dip direction describe
the attitude of planes, and trend and plunge give attitude of lines.
N
A
120
E
B
S
Figure 2.2. A line AB makes 120, measured clockwise, with the geographic
north. The bearing of the line can be stated equivalently as N120, N300, E30S,
S60E, N60W or W30N. Note that the suffix indicates the direction from
which bearing is measured.
The bearing of a line is usually stated in two different conventions. For example the
bearing of the line AB in Fig. 2.2 can be stated as N120 (i.e., 120 clockwise from N) or
E30S (i.e., 30 from E towards S). It may also be stated equivalently as N300, S60E,
N60W or W30N.
Orientations of planes and lines observed in an outcrop can be measured directly
using a clinometer, which is a magnetic compass with provision to measure inclination.
The use of a clinometer is best demonstrated in an outcrop. The bearing of a line is
measured with respect to geographic North Pole (or true north direction) but the
magnetic needle in a clinometer obviously points towards magnetic North Pole. We all
know that true and magnetic North Poles are not same. In 2003, the magnetic North
Pole was located at about 7818N latitude and 104W longitude near Ellef Ringes
Island, northern Canada and about 700 km from the geographic North Pole. The angle
between magnetic N-S line and geographic N-S line is called declination, which varies
from place to place on the surface of the earth. The magnetic north direction must be
corrected to get the direction of the geographic north. Most clinometers have provision
to make such a correction. The declination in India is close to zero and, therefore, we
can take magnetic north as determined with a clinometer as true north direction.
Two aspects of attitude of planes need to be remembered. Firstly, many a cross
sections are drawn on seismic reflection profiles. In some cases we have no choice with
our first cross section, such as in offshore or areas covered with alluvium or in desert.
In seismic reflection profiles, the horizontal axes are distance and the vertical scale is
two-way-travel time (TWT). Obviously, the horizontal and vertical scales are different,
and therefore, the dip of reflectors we see in the profiles are not true dips. Velocity
models are required in order to convert TWT into depth. Further, artifacts, such as
diffractions or velocity pull-ups/pull-downs may also give false dips of reflectors.
Structural interpretations based exclusively on seismic reflection profiles without depth
conversion and consideration for artifacts may give distorted picture. Secondly, we
prefer to draw structural cross sections perpendicular to the dominant orientations of
strikes of bedding planes/axial planes and/or trends of fold axes. However, more
commonly we find that in some parts, the dip directions are oblique to the line of
sections. In such cases, apparent dips should be used while constructing cross sections.
In order to understand the spatial relations between angular components shown in
Fig. 2.1 and defined above, three-dimensional visualizations of problems involving
orientations of planes and lines are very important. Once the ability to visualize in 3D
is developed, more efficient and quicker methods, including readily available
softwares, may be applied to solve real life structural problems.
10
D'
D
A
K'
B
K
d
J
Q
R
Plane P
I
F
E
M
L
H
G
Consider the shaded plane P, i.e., the plane AIGS, in Fig. 2.3. The plane occurs at
different elevations at the four edges of the block, i.e., at A, I, G and S at edges AE,
BF, CG and DH, respectively. We know that a strike line for a plane can be drawn if we
can find two points on the plane at the same elevation with respect to a datum plane
(e.g., mean sea level). On a geological map, we look for two intersections between a
rock contact and a topographic contour in order to draw a strike line. Points S and J are
such points and a line through them gives us a strike line at the elevation given by the
plane PQRS. The line KD is the projection of line JS onto the plane ABCD. Note that
along the strike line KD, the plane P is always at a depth of d. The line LD, which is
parallel to KD and passes through A, is also a strike line but at the elevation given by
the plane ABCD. Plane ANLE is a vertical plane oriented perpendicular to strike lines.
Line AM is the intersection between vertical plane ANLE and the plane P. Therefore,
NAM is the dip of the plane and AN (i.e., from A towards N) is the dip direction.
Block diagrams are useful to visualize problems involving angular components of
planes and lines, such as three-point problem, determination of strike/true dip from
apparent dips or determination of apparent dip in any direction from true dip/strike.
However, solving problems graphically with the help of 3-D diagrams is never easy.
The solutions may be obtained by projecting everything onto one plane. In Fig. 2.4, the
11
lines AI, AM and AS (traces of the plane along three vertical surfaces) have been
projected on the horizontal surface ABCD by rotating 90 along lines AB, AN, and AD,
respectively. This type of graphical construction may be employed to find solutions to
several types of problems involving dip and strikes of planes, for example: (1)
determination of true dip from apparent dips in the directions, such as, AB and AD, (2)
determination of apparent dips from true dip/dip direction, and (3) solution to three
point problems wherein dip/strike of a plane can be determined from known depths of
occurrence of the plane at different locations.
North
K'
A
I
D'
J
dip
d
B
S
d
K
d
N
dip
direction
M D
The angular relationships between planes and lines can be readily determined
using a stereonet. These days almost all earth scientists use easily available computer
software for stereographic analyses of orientation data. However, it is extremely
important to be able to visualize in 3D the orientations of lines and planes in a
stereogram (Fig. 2.5). Consider that AB is the trace of an inclined plane P on a
horizontal outcrop surface and the line contains a line OL (Fig. 2.5a). If a sphere is
drawn centered at point O, then the plane P (and its extension above the surface)
intersects the sphere as a great circle (Figs. 2.5b). This great circle is a spherical
projection of the plane in 3D and must be projected onto 2D space before any
orientation problem can be solved. The equatorial circle in Fig. 2.5b is the surface on
which planes and lines are projected. In order to get the projection of a plane, lines are
drawn connecting each point on the part of the great circle in the lower hemisphere to
12
zenith point Z. Five such lines joining points 1 though 5 to Z are shown in Fig. 2.5c.
Each of these lines intersects the equatorial circle and the arc traced by the loci of such
intersection points is the projection of the plane P. The arc 1-2-3-4-5 is the projection
of plane P and is called a great circle. A view down from Z will look like Fig. 2.5d and
is called a stereogram. The limiting circle is called primitive, which also represents a
horizontal plane. The line OL is projected as a point L. Note that both the plane and the
line have lost one dimension after projection, as happens with any projection diagram.
Z
W
B E
2'
3'
L'
4'
Plane P
L
(a)
Plane P
(b)
(c)
Z
E
L'
4'
P'
3'
(d)
Great
circle
2'
Pole
O' dip
dip
(e)
(f)
Figure 2.5. Derivation of stereographic projection diagram. See text for details.
If a large number of planes are plotted as great circles, the stereogram may become
cluttered. In such a situation, planes are plotted as poles instead of as great circle. In
Fig. 2.5e line OP is perpendicular to plane P and is projected at point P' on the
equatorial plane. So, P' is pole to plane P. The primitive, i.e., the limiting circle
represents the great circle of a horizontal plane and a straight line passing through
center is a vertical plane. Therefore, great circles for planes with gentle dips will plot
closer to primitive and steeper planes will have their great circles closer to the center
(Fig. 2.5f). For poles it is just the reverse. Poles to planes with gentle dips will plot close
to the center, whereas the planes with steep dips will have their poles closer to
13
primitive. Note that if planes are gently dipping, their poles will have steeper plunge
and plunge of poles to steeply dipping planes will have gentler plunge. Similarly, lines
with gentle plunges will plot closer to primitive and steeply plunging lines will plot
closer the center. Using stereographic projections we can solve some of the three point
problems quickly and efficiently. This technique is also useful for statistical analyses of
orientation data.
14
3.1 Force
Forces acting in rocks produce deformation structures that structural geologists
study. Therefore, it is necessary for us to understand how forces are distributed in the
earth and how they produce different types of structures. Since we usually study old
deformation, we do not see or measure forces directly in rocks because forces are
instantaneous. Rarely we can see or feel the effect of forces acting in the earth as at the
time of an earthquake. Although forces acting on rocks cause deformations in them,
structural geologists usually talk in terms of stress. Force and stress are not exactly the
same though they are closely related, as we will see.
High school physics textbook tell us that a force is an influence, which has an
intention to set a body at rest in motion or to change the velocity and direction of a
body in motion or to change the shape of a body. Note that a force may not be able to
do any of these but it has to have the intention. This, in essence, is the Newtons first
law of motion.
Forces may be balanced or unbalanced. The forces are balanced if the summation of
all forces acting on a body is zero otherwise the forces are unbalanced. When balanced
forces act on a body it does not change its position at rest (or of uniform motion) and it
appears as if no force is acting on it. Unbalanced forces can move a stationary body or
they can stop/slow down/accelerate a moving body. Force is a vector quantity having
15
magnitude as well as direction. A force is called a body force if it can work from a
distance and depend on the amount of material affected. The gravitational force is a
body force. The forces that act across a surface of contact between two adjacent parts
are called surface forces. Tectonic forces, which drive lithospheric plates, are surface
forces. These two types of forces are closely related in the earth.
If a force F acting on a body of mass m produces acceleration a in the body then
according to Newtons second law of motion (* indicates multiplication):
F=m*a
The unit of force in S.I. system is newton (N), which is the force acting on a body of
1 kg mass produces an acceleration of 1 meter (m) per second (s) per second. Therefore,
1 N = 1 kg * 1 m s-2
If we consider a force that produces an acceleration of 1 cm s-2 on a body of mass 1
g, then the unit is dyne (dyn):
1 dyn = 1 g * 1 cm s-2, and since 1 kg = 103 gm and 1 m s-2 = 102 cm s-2
1 N = 105 dyn
Most of the time we use the terms weight and mass interchangeably but they are
not the same. When a body of mass m is allowed to fall freely, its acceleration is that of
gravity g and the force acting on it is its weight W, so
W=m*g
The value of g varies from place to place, but for our purpose it can be taken to be a
constant with a value of 9.8 m s-2. So, a free falling body of mass 1 kg will have a weight
of
W = 1 kg * 9.8 m s-2 = 9.8 N
16
Therefore, the weight of a body is the gravitational force exerted on it by the earth.
Weight, being a force is a vector quantity. The direction of this vector is the direction of
the gravitational force, i.e., towards the center of the earth. So when we say weight is 1
kg, what we actually mean is the gravitation force exerted on a body of mass 1 kg!
Newton and dyne are wholly formal units of force but they are not familiar and
difficult to relate to everyday experiences. One kg, on the other hand, is very familiar
and is used frequently as somewhat informal unit of force. If we put a block of iron of
mass 10 kg on a tabletop, the force exerted by the iron block on the table is 98 N or 98 *
105 dyn. Alternately, we may say that the iron block exerts a force of 10 kg on the table.
Let us consider the uppermost cubic meter of a granite cube in an outcrop with the
cube separated from the surrounding rock by open joints on its four vertical sides. We
now wish to calculate the force acting on the basal surface of the granite cube. This
force will be sum of the force exerted by the atmosphere acting on the top surface of the
cube plus the force exerted by the cube. The mass of a column of atmosphere occurring
on top of the cube is 9700 kg and the mass of a cubic meter of granite ( = 2.7 g cm-3) is
2700 kg. The force acting on the base of the cube can be stated as 12400 kg or more
formally as:
F = (9700 + 2700) kg * 9.8 m s-2 = 121520 N = 121520 * 105 dyn
Let us consider a plane half way down the above-mentioned cube of granite. The
top half of the cube plus the atmosphere on the top will exert a force across the plane
and this force (10.83 * 104 N) can be represented by a vertically downward pointing
vector. According to Newtons third law of motion, the lower half of the cube will exert
an equal and oppositely directed force. In this case the two force vectors will point
towards each other and particles on either side of the plane will be pushed closer
together. Such forces are called compressive force. If the force vectors point away from
each other, the particles on either side of the plane will be pulled away from each other
and the force is tensile force. Compressive forces are given positive sign and tensile
forces are given negative sign (Fig. 3.1b).
17
A force vector directed across a plane can have any orientation with respect to the
plane. If the force vector is oriented perpendicular to the plane it is a normal force (Fn),
if it is oriented parallel to the plane it is a shear force (Fs). A force vector may not be
oriented either normal or parallel to the plane. Such a force vector can be resolved into
normal force and shear force, just like any other vector (Fig. 3.1a). The shear force can
be further resolved into forces parallel to any convenient coordinate directions (Fig.
3.1a). Sign conventions for different kinds of forces are shown in Figs. 3.1b,c.
3.2 Stress
If we place a 10 kg weight on top of a cubic meter of quartzite nothing happens. But
if we put the same 10 kg weight on a grain of sand it may get pulverized. Intuitively we
can say that the grain of sand felt a lot more force than the cube of quartzite although
both of them were under the same force. In order to express this we need to define a
new term called stress.
z
A
F y
Fn
Plane P
(b)
B FAB
compressive (+ve)
Fx
Fs
(a)
Fy
A
FBA
Plane P
(c)
FBA
B FAB
tensile (-ve)
Plane P
+ve
-ve
Figure 3.1. (a) Resolution of force vectors. The total vector F (bold indicates
vector) acting on a plane P can be resolved into normal force (Fn) and shear
force (Fs). The shear force can further be resolved into force vectors parallel to x
(Fx) and y (Fy) co-ordinate axes. (b) Sign and notation conventions for surface
forces: compressive and tensile forces are considered +ve and ve, respectively.
FAB indicates force exerted by body B towards body A and FBA indicates force
exerted by body A towards body B (c) Sign conventions for shear forces:
counter-clockwise and clockwise shear forces are +ve and ve, respectively.
Let us again consider the uppermost cubic meter of granite cube in an outcrop with
the cube separated from the surrounding rock by open joints on its four vertical sides.
18
The force on the 1 m2 basal plane of the cube is 121520 N or 12400 kg. If we normalize
force by the area we get 121520 N m-2 or 12400 kg m-2. Note that these values are same
as 12.152 N cm-2 and 1.24 kg cm-2, respectively. In other words, we get the same
normalized force no matter what the area of the basal plane we take so long we have 1
m high rock column and the column of atmosphere on top. This normalized force, i.e.,
force divided by area, is called stress ():
Stress () = force (F) / area (A)
Let us consider a situation where non-uniform forces are acting across a plane (P).
The stress across a small part of the plane (A) is given by
= F / A
If we take an infinitesimally small area we may consider it to be a point, p. The
stress across the plane P at point p will be given by
= dF / dA
Stress on a plane is a vector quantity because it is the product of a vector (F) and a
scalar (1/ A). Stress has magnitude equal to the ratio of force to area and a direction
parallel to the force across the plane. The formal unit of stress is pascal (Pa):
stress = force / area = (kg m s-2) m-2 = N m-2 =Pa
In the earth, most stresses are significantly larger than a pascal, so we frequently
use megapascal (Mpa)
1 Mpa = 106 Pa = 10 bar = 9.8692 atm
Like any other vector, a stress vector can be resolved into components to any
convenient reference directions (Fig. 3.2). Obviously, stress vectors can be added
vectorially so long as the stress vectors are related to a single plane. Stresses acting
19
perpendicular and parallel to the plane are called normal stress and shear stress. A
stress vector acting across a plane P at point p has a stress vector of equal magnitude
but oriented in opposite direction. If the two vectors point towards each other the stress
is compressive (+ve), otherwise the stress is tensile (-ve). Note the similarities between
Figs. 3.1 and 3.2.
the centre of the ellipse is centered at the origin, i.e., at x = 0 and y = 0 in x-y
coordinate system
major and minor axes are coincident with x and y axes, respectively
20
the major and minor radii of the ellipse are the magnitudes of 1 and 2,
respectively
then, the equation of the stress ellipse is (x2 / 12) + (y2 / 22) = 1
BA
n
s
Plane P
AB
(b) B
Plane P
compressive (+ve)
y
x
(a)
BA
AB
tensile (-ve)
Plane P
(c)
+ve
-ve
Figure 3.2. Resolution, and notation and sign conventions of stress vectors.
Note the similarity with Fig. 3.1. (a) The total stress vector (bold indicates
vector) acting on a plane P can be resolved into normal force ( n) and shear
force ( s). The shear force can further be resolved into force vectors parallel to x
( x) and y ( y) co-ordinate axes. (b) Sign and notation conventions for surface
forces: compressive and tensile forces are considered +ve and ve, respectively.
AB indicates force exerted by body B towards body A and BA indicates force
exerted by body A towards body B (c) Sign conventions for shear forces:
counter-clockwise and clockwise shear forces are +ve and ve, respectively.
Principal
planes of
stress
AB
B
A
p
BA
2
1
Plan e P
(a)
(b)
Figure 3.3. (a) Stress ellipse given by loci of heads of all the stress vectors acting
at point p on plane P. AB and BA associated with plane P are also shown. Stress
vectors in this case point away from point p and thus they are tensile. Note that
AB and BA are not perpendicular to plane P. (b) Two pairs of stress vectors
oriented perpendicular to the planes across which they operate. These stress
vectors are called principal stresses and coincide with the major and minor axes
of stress ellipse. The planes oriented perpendicular to the principal stress
directions are called principal planes of stress.
21
Principal
planes of
stress
AB
B
A
p
BA
2
1
Plane P
(a)
(b)
Figure 3.4. Stress ellipse for a situation where all the stress vectors are
compressive. See caption to Fig. 3.3.
1
3
Figure 3.5. Stress ellipsoid, i.e., stress in 3D. Note that there are three principal
stresses and three principal planes of stress.
The three principal stresses are 1, 2, and 3 with magnitudes 1 > 2 > 3. Three
principal planes of stress define three stress ellipses containing 1-2, 2-3 and 1-3
axes of the stress ellipsoid. One, two or three principal stresses may have non-zero
values. In triaxial state of stress all the three principal stresses have non-zero values, in
biaxial state of stress only two principal stresses have non-zero values and in uniaxial
22
state of stress only one principal stress has non-zero value. If 1 2 3 it is called
general or polyaxial stress. In axial stress two of the three stresses have same magnitude.
If 1 > 2 = 3 it is called axial compression and the ellipsoid is a prolate spheroid. In axial
extension 1 = 2 > 3 and the stress ellipsoid is an oblate spheroid. In hydrostatic stress
magnitudes of all the three stresses are same, i.e., 1 = 2 = 3. The ellipsoid is a sphere
and the stress is called pressure, which is the only kind of stress that can exist in a fluid
at rest. The equation of a stress ellipsoid is
(x2 / 12) + (y2 / 22) + (z2 / 32) = 1
23
24
4. Mohr Circle
Normal (n) and shear (s) components of stress on a real or imaginary plane are
important for the understanding of theories of development of faults and joints. The
equations of normal and shear stresses in terms of principal stresses (1-2, 1-3 or 23 space) are most useful in understanding the basic concept of stress. Finally, pictorial
representation of how normal and shear stresses vary with the change in orientation of
the plane with respect to principal stresses is very illustrative; this we do with the help
of a diagram called Mohr circle.
The equations for the normal and shear stresses can be derived from force-balance
problems, which assumes that if a body is in equilibrium (i.e., it does not move or spin)
then all the forces in any one direction sum to zero. Note that we should always
balance forces and not stresses. We should first find the forces acting in any particular
direction, determine stresses in terms of the forces, and then derive the expressions for
normal and shear stresses.
Consider a prismatic body in the earth with two of the bounding planes oriented
parallel to the maximum and minimum force vectors (Fig.4.1). Another bounding plane
P has an area A and whose orientation may be specified by the angle made by the
perpendicular to the plane with maximum (F1) force direction. Therefore, the areas of
the left and right faces of the prism are Asin and Acos, respectively. Resolution of the
magnitudes (F1 and F2) of forces acting on the three bounding planes is shown in Fig.
4.1. Resolved forces are parallel and perpendicular to the plane P.
Forces trying to push the prismatic body upward must be equal to the forces trying
to push the prismatic body downward, if the body has to remain in equilibrium.
Therefore, from the balance of forces acting across the plane P (Fig. 4.1):
F1n + F3n = F1 cos + F3 sin
25
(4.1)
(4.2)
Fn
F1n
F1
Plane P of area A
F1
F3
F1s
Fs
F3n
F3
F3s
Perpendicular
to plane P
s in
F3
os
Ac
F3 sin
F3 cos
F1 sin
F1 cos
F1
We now calculate the stresses in terms forces from the relation, stress = force / area:
n = Fn / A
or, Fn = A n
s = Fs / A
Fs = A s
(4.3)
and
1 = F1 / (A cos)
3 = F3 / (A sin)
or F1 = 1 A cos
F3 = 3 A sin
26
(4.4)
Replacing (eq. 4.3) and (eq. 4.4) in (eq. 4.1) and (eq. 4.2), we obtain
n = 1 cos2 + 3 sin2
(4.5)
(4.6)
Using the identities cos2 = (1 + cos2)/2, sin2 = (1 - cos2)/2 and sin cos = sin2 in
eqs. 4.5 and 4.6, and collecting terms we obtain
n = (1 + 3) + (1 - 3) cos2
(4.7)
s = (1 - 3) sin 2
(4.8)
From the above two equations we can calculate n and s on any plane, given , 1,
and 3. The above equations are derived for the 1-3 principal plane. We can derive
similar equations for 1-2 and 2-3 principal planes also.
Equations (4.7) and (4.8) define a circle with n and s as x and y axes, respectively.
The center of the circle (on the x-axis) and radius are given by (1 + 3)/2 and (1 3)/2, respectively. This circle is known as the Mohr circle for stress.
1
325 bars
70O
s, bars
100
70O
P
75 bars
140O
20O
3 100
100
200
n, bars
40 O
300
400
100
(a)
(b)
Figure 4.2. Construction of a Mohr circle. (a) A very small rectangular block
showing state of stress and orientations of two planes on which normal and
shear stresses are to be determined using Mohr circle. (b) Mohr circle for the
state of stress as shown in (a). See text for details.
27
28
+s
P
1/2(13 ) sin2
1/2(13 )
1/2(1+3 )
+n
1/2(13 ) cos2
Figure 4.3. Mohr circle showing significance different terms in equations 4.7
and 4.8.
1-3
1-2
2-3
Figure 4.4. Mohr circles for state of stress in three dimensions. The three circles
represent three principal planes of stress.
Sign conventions for the Mohr diagram are as follows: compressive normal stresses
and shear stresses represented by counterclockwise or sinistral pair of arrows are
positive and tensile normal stresses and shear stresses represented by clockwise or
dextral pair of arrows are negative (Figs. 4.2, 4.3); is positive for planes whose normal
can be located towards counterclockwise direction from 1, otherwise is negative (Fig.
4.5).
29
Plane P
Plane Q
zP
(a)
zP
(b)
Figure 4.5. The sign convention for angle . (a) +ve . (b) ve .
Two perpendicular planes (P and Q, Fig. 4.6) with = 45 (or 2 = 90) have
the largest absolute magnitude of shearing stress, which is equal to the radius of the
Mohr circle [or, (1 - 3)/2 for 1-3 principal plane]. Shear stresses for planes
oriented perpendicular to any of the principal stress directions are zero. It may
sound logical to presume that shear fractures (i.e., faults) should form at 45 to 1.
As we will see (section 7) shear fractures usually develop at angles less than this.
s
3
P
(13)/2
+ 90
- 90O
(13)/2
(a)
(b)
30
stress in solid. Both the principal stresses can be either positive or negative and the
states of stress are general tension (Fig. 4.7c) or general compression (Fig. 4.7d),
respectively. In uniaxial tension only one principal stress is non-zero and it is tensile
(Fig. 4.7e), whereas in uniaxial compression only one principal stress is non-zero and
it is compressive (Fig. 4.7f). In many states of stress one principal stress is tensile
and the other principal stress is compressive (Fig. 4.7g,h,i). Pure shear stress is a
special class of state of stress where the two principal stresses have the same
magnitude but opposite sign (Fig. 4.7i). In such cases, planes of maximum shear
stress are also planes of pure shear, i.e., normal stresses across these planes are zero.
Except for lithostatic tension (Fig. 4.7a), all other classes of stress are possible in the
earth.
s
e g
c
n
h f
b
s
Figure 4.7. Mohr circles for various types of state of stress in two dimensions.
Any non-hydrostatic state of stress, either in two-dimensions or in threedimensions, can be decomposed into two parts: a mean stress (m) and a stress deviator
or deviatoric stress (d). The mean stress is the average of the principal stresses:
m = (1 + 2)/2
m = (1 + 2 + 3)/3
in three dimensions.
31
and is a measure of how much the normal stress in any direction deviates from the
mean or hydrostatic stress. Along three principal stress directions we have three
principal deviatoric stresses whose magnitudes are given by:
1d = 1 - m
2d = 2 - m
3d = 3 - m
Note that sum of the right hand terms in the above equations is zero. For
example, a state of stress with the values of three principal stresses 750, 1050, and
1560 bars can be thought of as combining a mean stress of 1120 bars and three
deviatoric stresses of 370, -70, and 440 bars. Mean stress in two-dimension is a
state of hydrostatic tension or compression and locates the center of the Mohr circle;
deviatoric stress is a pure shear stress. Given mean stress and deviatoric stress we
can construct the Mohr circle.
The deviatoric stress is responsible for distortion (or strain) in a body. The
distortion may be elastic (i.e., reversible) or plastic (i.e., permanent). Most
deformations are result of differential stress rather than the absolute magnitudes of
principal stresses, except for dilation. Differential stress is the difference between
the magnitudes of maximum and minimum principal stresses (1 - 3). The mean
stress can be thought of as hydrostatic (or isotropic) part of the stress system and
causes only volumetric changes (dilation) in the material. Mean stress also controls
the strength of materials. For example, fracturing is inhibited with increasing mean
stress.
32
5. Strain
5.1. Deformation
When force is applied to a rock body, the particles within the rock body are
displaced and the rock is said to be deformed. Two types of deformations are usually
recognized (Fig. 5.1).
(a)
(b)
(c)
Mother Nature does not draw a grid, as in Fig. 5.1a, before deforming a rock for our
convenience! In some cases, however, Nature preserves features that can be used to
determine type and amount of deformation. For example, the branches in plant fossil
33
Neuroteris are approximately straight and parallel before deformation (Fig. 5.2a). The
straightness and parallelism may be preserved (Fig. 5.2b) or destroyed (Fig. 5.2b) after
deformation indicating homogeneous or inhomogeneous nature of deformation,
respectively.
(b)
(a)
(c)
Figure 5.2. Undeformed (a) plant fossil Neuroteris showing homogeneous (b)
and inhomogeneous (c) deformations
Rigid-body translation is the movement of the entire body through space in such
a way that the shape does not change. The movement vectors for all the
particles in any external coordinate system have the same orientation and
magnitude (Fig. 5.3a).
Volume change, as the term implies, change in volume of the body without any
change in shape. Volume change is also called dilation, although volume change
can be either positive or negative (Fig. 5.3d).
34
(a)
(c)
(b)
(d)
(e)
Note that the descriptions of distortion and volume change do not require an
external reference frame. The four processes are not mutually exclusive Fig. 5.3e
shows a deformation which includes all the four processes. Distortion and dilation
together make up strain, which involves movement of particles relative to each other. In
a more quantitative sense, strain is a mathematical description that relates the size and
shape of a body before and after deformation. A rock body may undergo rigid-body
movement, either translation or rotation or both, but it is almost impossible to
determine the exact amount of rigid-body movement. However, the strain in a rock can
be precisely determined if the rock contains objects of known, original shape and/or
size (e.g., Figs. 5.2, 5.3. Note that deformation and distortion (and strain) are not exactly
the same although it is not uncommon to find them used interchangeably in the
literature. Further it is important to remember that translation/rotation of a rock body
may or may not be accompanied by internal strain, i.e., distortion/dilation.
There are several ways strain can be measured but all of them involve
measurement of some kind of change from an initial undeformed to a final deformed
state. The changes that are generally measured are changes in lines, angles and volume.
35
36
Deformed (length Ld )
Deformed (length Ld )
L
2 cm
(a)
(b)
Figure 5.4. Longitudinal strain. (a) A line with initial length Li = 9.15 cm has
shortened to 6.69 (= Ld). The elongation (e), stretch (S), quadratic elongation (),
and natural strain () are -0.27, 0.73, 0.53 and -0.31, respectively. (b) A more
practical scenario wherein boudinaged quartz vein can be used to determine
both Li and Ld. The e, S, and are 0.37, 1.37, 1.87 and 0.31, respectively.
Shear strain can be determined if appropriate markers are present in rocks. For
example, we can determine shear strain from deformed trilobite Phillipsia because of
inherent bilateral symmetry (Fig. 5.6). Similarly, well-preserved worm burrows or mud
cracks and stratification surfaces can be used to determine shear strain.
The original perpendicular line (e.g., line AD in Fig. 5.5) may move either in a
clockwise direction or in an anticlockwise direction with respect to the original
37
orientation. Clockwise and anticlockwise shear strains are given negative and positive
signs, respectively.
x
A
Figure 5.5. Shear strain illustrated by a rectangle ABCD that has changed into a
parallelogram ABCD after deformation. ADA or BCB is the angular shear
(). Shear strain, = tan = x/y. If y is of unit length, = x.
(a)
(b)
38
1
1
x
(b)
(a)
If the radius of the initial circle is taken to be of unit length, the major and minor
axes of the ellipse can be represented by 1 (= 1+e1) and 3 (= 1+e3), where 1 and 3
are maximum and minimum elongations (Fig. 5.7). So, the equation of strain ellipse
centered at origin is,
x2/1 + z2/3 = 1
39
Extension
Figure 5.8. Initial undeformed circle superimposed on strain ellipse. Two lines
can be drawn by joining opposite points of intersection between the circle and
ellipse. The lengths of these two lines have not changed during deformation.
They are termed as lines of no finite longitudinal strain and separate area where
all the lines have undergone finite extension (shaded area) from the area where
all the lines have undergone finite shortening.
40
(a)
(b)
Figure 5.9. (a) Non-rotational strain or pure shear. The major and minor axes of
the successive strain ellipses are coincidental. (b) Rotational or simple shear.
The strain ellipse undergoes rotation with respect to an external fixed reference
frame during progressive deformation.
41
42
6. Stress-Strain Relations
If a material is stressed, it gets strained. Rheology is the material response to applied
stress. Much of the classical theoretical and experimental principals of stress-strain
relations were developed in material science where materials are usually taken to be
homogeneous and isotropic. The behaviour of natural earth materials, i.e., rocks and
minerals, is often extremely complex because the rocks are neither homogeneous nor
isotropic. Even if a rock is approximately homogeneous to start with, it develops
fabric(s) during deformation and becomes heterogeneous. Nevertheless, stress-strain
relationships for homogeneous and isotropic materials can be used as a first
approximation for rocks. In the simplest form, materials respond to stress in two
different ways. When the stress is withdrawn, the material may return to original shape
and size, and strain is said to be recoverable. Otherwise the strain is permanent.
We can give stress parallel to the axis of a cylindrical rock and measure strain. The
results can be plotted on a stress-strain graph. At the initial stage stress-strain curves
are usually straight with steep slopes (Fig. 6.1a). The straight line implies that there is a
constant ratio between stress and strain and the steep slope means that small strain
accumulates for large incremental increase in stress. The most important aspect of this
part of the stress-strain curve is that the strain is completely recoverable, i.e., the
material returns to original dimension (zero strain) when stress components all drop to
zero. This kind of material behaviour is called elastic. The area under the straight line
curve is a measure of stored elastic energy. In some elastic materials, there is no time
lag between change in stress and corresponding change is stress. In other words, the
linear relation between stress and strain is instantaneous. This material behaviour is
known as Hookean behaviour. It is obvious that the Hookean behaviour and elasticity
are not exactly same. The following parameters are used to describe the properties of
elastic materials (see Fig. 6.1b):
43
Youngs Modulus: In Fig. 6.1b the elongation parallel to the axis of the cylinder e
is given by (ld li)/li. The stress is proportional to the strain for elastic material.
The proportionality constant, E, is called Youngs Modulus.
E=/e
This is for simple shortening and extension. The Youngs Modulus describes
how difficult it is to give longitudinal strain in a material. Higher the absolute
value of E, it will be more difficult to extend or shorten a material. Note that E
has same dimensions as stress (e.g., stress).
Initial
Deformed
Stress,
li ld
eL = (l d - l)/l
i
i
eT = (wd - wi)/wi
Area is a
measure of stored
elastic energy
(a)
Strain,
(b)
wd
wi
Figure 6.1. Stress-strain diagram for elastic deformation. The area under the
curve represents stored elastic energy. (b) Longitudinal (eL) and transverse (eT)
elongations.
and
eT = (wd wi) / wi
= eT / eL
44
Bulk Modulus: This elastic property given the relationship between change in
pressure [P, i.e., hydrostatic stress, mean = (1 + 2 + 3)/3] and consequent
volume change or dilation () of a block of elastic material. Thus the Bulk
Modulas, K, is given by:
K = mean /
The inverse of Bulk Modulus is known as compressibility. Obviously, the Bulk
Modulus is a measure of ease or difficulty with which an elastic material can be
compressed.
45
The above elastic moduli are constant throughout isotropic materials but they vary
from place to place in anisotropic rocks geologists have to deal with. Further, the four
elastic moduli are not independent of each other but are related to each other through
some simple relations:
G = E/[2 (1 + )] = [3 K (1 + 2)]/[(2 (1 + )]
If stress is continued to be increased, the rock may suddenly fracture in the elastic
range (Fig. 6.2a) and the stored elastic energy is released in the forms such as elastic
waves, sound and heat. This is known as brittle failure and the deformation is called
brittle deformation. The value of the stress at which brittle failure takes place is called
brittle strength, rupture strength or fracture strength.
Under many conditions, including conditions of common laboratory experiments,
the rocks undergo permanent strain instead of fracturing if elastic limit is exceeded. If
stress is withdrawn strain is not completely recovered. The materials showing such this
behaviour of permanent straining are plastic materials and the deformation is called
plastic deformation or ductile deformation. The point on the stress-strain curve where
the changeover from elastic to plastic deformation takes place is called yield point,
which can be difficult to locate precisely during an experiment. The stress at the yield
point is called yield stress, yield-point stress or yield strength. Yield stress is not a
constant for any one rock type but varies with temperature, confining pressure, fluid
pressure and strain rate. Two kinds of deformations can be envisaged above elastic
limit:
Strain hardening: In most deformed rocks, the stress-strain curve above yield
point has a positive slope (Fig. 6.2c). The slope of the curve is gentler than that
of elastic region and the curve is markedly non-linear. Strain can increase in this
situation only if stress is raised above initial yield stress; this process is called
46
brittle
strength
Fracture
Stress,
yield
strength
perfect
plastic
ultimate
strength
yield
strength
X
rupture
Stress,
Stress,
elastic
elastic
elastic
plastic
(strain hardening)
permanent strain
(a)
(b)
Strain,
(c)
Strain,
Y
Strain,
Figure 6.2. Stress-strain relationships of elastic, perfect plastic and plastic (strain
hardened) behaviour of materials.
47
48
Extension fracture: In this type of fracture, relative motion between the two sides
is perpendicular to the fracture surface. They signify overall extension
perpendicular to the fracture surface. This type of fracture is also called Mode-I
fracture (Fig. 7.1a).
Shear fractures: In this type of fracture, relative motion between the two sides is
parallel to the fracture surface. This type of fracture implies shearing movement
parallel to the fracture surface. The direction of relative motion may be
perpendicular or parallel to the edge of the fracture surface, they are called
Mode-II (Fig. 7.1b) and Mode-III (Fig. 7.1c) fracture, respectively. A mixed mode
fracture has components of both extension perpendicular to fracture and
shearing parallel to fracture.
(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 7.1. Types of fractures depending on relative motion between two sides.
(a) Mode-I extension fracture. (b) Mode-II shear fracture. (c) Mode-III shear
fracture.
49
Brittle fracture: Brittle deformation occurs at the rupture strength in the elastic
regime with the formation of brittle fractures, which are surfaces across which
material loses cohesion. Rocks do not show any change in shape such that the
broken pieces fits together to give the original shape and size of the rock body
(Fig. 7.2b).
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
Figure 7.2. Brittle and ductile deformations. (a) Undeformed cylinder. (b) Brittle
fracture. (d) Ductile deformation. (d) Brittle-ductile deformation.
Ductile fracture: In ductile deformation, the rocks show permanent strain that
smoothly varies through the deforming material and no clear cut fracture
develops in macroscopic scale (Fig. 7.2c). This term does not signify any specific
deformation mechanism. Also, ductile deformation need not necessarily signify
plastic deformation mechanism. It is a general term for macroscopic flow of
rocks that can be accomplished by brittle deformation or plastic deformation or
a combination of both. If the ductile deformation is accomplished by fracturing
and rotation of individual grains or grain aggregates, the deformation is called
cataclastic flow. If the ductile deformation is dominated by flow of individual
grains through dislocation glide and climb, and diffusion, the deformation is
called plastic flow. After some amount of ductile deformation, a deforming rock
may fail and develop fractures. This type of fracture is called ductile fracture,
50
Hydrostatic tension: Rocks break apart into random pieces if they are subjected to
high enough hydrostatic tensile stress when tensile stress exceeds cohesive
stresses that hold the particles in a rock together (Fig. 7.3b). This is a very
unlikely state of stress in the earth.
Axial or confined compression: Under this state of stress conjugate shear fractures
oriented at angles less than 45 to 1 form (Fig. 7.3f). The two fractures do not
form simultaneously but form sequentially. In homogeneous material, it is not
possible to predict which one of the two will form first. The line of intersection
between two fractures can have any orientation on a plane perpendicular to 1.
The possible orientations of shear fractures are tangent to a cone whose axis is
1. Displacements are parallel to fracture surfaces.
51
stress axis 2. The diehedral angle between the conjugate shear fractures is less
than 90, which is bisected by 1.
+s
+ s
1 = 2 = 3
p (pressure)
1 = 2 = 3
+n
(a)
+ n
(b)
+s
2 = 3 = 0
+ s
+ n
1 = 2 = 0
(c)
+ n
(d)
+s
+ s
2 = 3
1
3
+
1 = 2 n
2 = 3
+ n
(f)
(e)
+ s
3
3
+ n
(g)
Figure 7.3. Types of fractures depending state of stress in a rock body. In each
diagram state of stress is shown by a Mohr diagram and orientations of
fractures related to stress axes are shown. (a) Hydrostatic compression. (b)
Hydrostatic tension. (c) Uniaxial compression. (d) Uniaxial tension. (e) Axial
tension. (f) Axial or confined compression. (g) Triaxial stress.
52
a (1 or 3)
Steel
housing
Confining
pressure
(by a fluid)
c = 2 = 3
c = 1 = 2
(a c), kbar
Cylindical
rock
sample
14
Weak, impermeable
rubber/copper jacket
Piston
13
Fracture
12
Fracture
11
11
(b)
a
0
-5
Axial strain,
+s
Fracture
Unstable
+s
Mohr/fracture/
failure envelope
Transitional
tensile
behaviour
Stable
+2
1
(d)
1
4
5
kbars
14
4
5
kbars
(c)
-10
-3
x 10
13
3
(a)
12
2
+n
Coulomb
fracture
behaviour
= (90 +)/2
p
+2
Tensile
fracture
behaviour
(e)
(f)
53
+n
The rock samples are cut into cylindrical shape, jacketed by weak and
impermeable layer of copper or rubber and put in a piston cylinder. The sample is
surrounded by a chamber filled with fluid through which confining pressure (c) can
be varied and controlled. The rock sample is subjected to an axial load (a) through a
piston driven by hydraulic ram. The axial load can be either 1 or 3 (a = 1 or a = 3).
The state of stress can, therefore, be either axial compression (a = 1 > 2 = 3 = c) or
axial extension (a = 3 < 2 = 1 = c). The triaxial testing apparatus can be modified
for experiments under uniaxial tension, but such experiments are rare. Data obtained
from such experiments are usually graphed in Mohr diagrams, and stress-strain
diagrams with stress and strain plotted on vertical and horizontal axes, respectively.
Let us consider a series of experiments on a dry homogeneous rock in a triaxial rig
and demonstrate the results of the experiments in a stress-strain diagram as well as in a
Mohr diagram (Fig. 7.4, Suppe 1985). The experiments are conducted under axial
compression such that a = 1 > c. We first increase both 1 and c together until both
of them reach a value of 0.5 kbar and the rock sample acquires an initial natural strain
(0) parallel to the axis of the cylindrical sample, i.e., parallel to 1. Note that the
difference between axial load and confining pressure is zero at this stage (i.e., 1 - c =
0). We now keep increasing the axial stress keeping the confining pressure constant.
The strains and Mohr circles at three discreet axial stresses (11, 12 and 13) are shown
in Figs. 7.4a and 7.4b, respectively. If at anytime during this stage of deformation the
axial stress is returned to 0.5 kbar, the axial strain returns to 0. Eventually, the rock
sample fails at an axial stress of 14. Let us assume that this stress is 4.5 kbar. We take
the sample out of the rig and find that one shear fracture has developed oriented at 24
to the axial stress direction, i.e., the axis of the cylinder. If we repeat the experiment
with another sample of the same rock we get a fracture oriented at the same angle but
on the other side of the axis, i.e., together they form a conjugate pair. However, we can
not predict which of the two possible fractures will yield during a particular
experiment. We say that the fracture strength of the rock is 4.5 kbar at a confining
pressure of 0.5 kbar. The largest Mohr circle in Fig. 7.4c represents the state of stress at
fracture. We now keep only the Mohr circle at fracture and remove the all other Mohr
54
circles for convenience (Fig. 7.4d). The orientations of the two fracture planes (p and p')
are also shown in Fig. 7.4d. We now conduct similar fracture experiments at increasing
confining pressures and plot Mohr circles at fracture at each confining pressure in the
same diagram (Fig. 7.4.e). For each Mohr circle there will be a pair of fracture planes
represented by p and p'. Loci of these points give us a curve called Mohr, or fracture or
failure envelope, which divides the Mohr diagram into stable and unstable parts (Fig.
7.4e). The state of stress in the stable part does not lead to any kind of fracturing. The
state of stress in the unstable part leads to catastrophic fracturing of rock. The Mohr
envelope shows three types of brittle fracture behaviour (Fig.7.4f):
Tensile fractures: Tensile fracture behaviour is shown at the point where the
Mohr envelope crosses the negative side of the n axis. The Mohr envelope is
tangent to the Mohr circle only at this point so that, only one set of fractures
oriented perpendicular to maximum tensile stress can develop. The tensile
strength, T0, is independent of other principal stresses and varies between 50
and 200 bars for most common rocks. Note that T0, is the value at the point
where Mohr envelope intersects n axis.
Coulomb fracture behaviour: The fracture behaviour of rocks in the straight line
segment of the Mohr envelope (continuous line in Fig.7.4f) is called the
Coulomb fracture behaviour. Obviously, fracture strength increases linearly
with confining pressure in this part of the Mohr envelope. This behaviour is
common for many rocks at intermediate confining pressure with 1
approximately greater than |5T0|. In order to describe the Coulomb fracture
behaviour, we can write a linear equation of the form:
|s*| = C + n tan
(7.1)
|s*| = C + n
(7.2)
where, s* is the critical shear stress, i.e., the shear stress at fracture; c and are
the intercept and slope, respectively; and is the slope angle of the line. The
above equation is commonly called Coulomb fracture criterion. The constants C
55
and describes the failure properties of rocks. C is the cohesive shear strength,
which represents resistance to shear fracture on a plane with zero normal stress,
and and are called coefficient of internal friction and angle of internal
friction, respectively. Whenever, the state of stress on a plane of some
orientation satisfies equations (7.1) or (7.2), a shear fracture may develop on that
plane. For a triaxial stress, the criterion is satisfied on two planes where Mohr
circle is tangent to the Mohr envelope. These two planes are symmetrically
oriented about 1 (or 3) axis and intersect along 2 axis. They form a set of
conjugate shear planes. Shear fracture may develop along any one of these two
planes but the fracture criterion does not predict which of the two orientations
will be preferred at failure. The and are related by the relation
= (90 + )/2
(7.3)
(7.4)
where, S and K are compressive strength and earth-pressure coefficient and given by
S = 2 C [(2 + 1) + ]
(7.5)
K = [(2 + 1) + ]2
(7.6)
56
+s
Mohr envelope
Unstable
+s
Mohr envelope
Unstable
Stable
Stable
T0
3e
State of
effective
stress
Pf
1e
+n
(a)
3e
1e
+n
State of
applied
stress
p'
s
Pf
State of
effective
stress
State of
applied
stress
(b)
Figure 7.5. Effect of pore fluid pressure on Mohr diagram. (a) Low differential
stress leads to tensile fractures. (b) Relatively large differential stress leads to
shear fractures.
57
(7.7)
So it seems that the pore fluid pressure should be about 40% of lithostatic
pressure. However, it does not always work that way. In many deep drill wells in
sedimentary basins, the ratio approaches unity. In metamorphic petrology this ratio
is one unless otherwise specified. It is unreasonable to assume constant density for
easily compressible fluid although the same assumption may not be too bad for rather
incompressible rocks occurring in the upper part of the crust. The value of should
increase, as density of fluid increases with depth. It is for nothing that a metamorphic
petrologist will argue that water and fluids are not exactly same things! Secondly, pore
spaces may be not interconnected all the way to the surface. There may be
impermeable barriers preventing fluids at depth communicating with fluids at surface
and building up fluid pressure (formation overpressure).
The effect of fluid pressure on fracturing of rocks can be best explained through the
concept of effective stress. When a component of stress is lowered by an amount equal
to the pore fluid pressure, it is called effective stress. Thus,
ne = n - Pf
1e = 1 - Pf
2e = 2 - Pf
(7.8)
3e = 3 - Pf
ce = c - Pf
emean = (1 + 2 + 3 - 3Pf)/3
where superscript e denotes effective stress. Shear stresses are not affected because
fluid at rest cannot sustain shear stress.
The size of the Mohr circle remains between state of effective stress and state of
stress with zero fluid pressure. This is because differential stresses in both cases are
same, i.e., (1 - 3) = (1e - 3e). The only effect is seen in translating of the Mohr circle
towards lower compressive stress (i.e., towards left) in the Mohr diagram by an
58
amount equal to Pf (Fig. 7.3). The equations describing fracture criterion also remain
same except that ne replaces n:
|s*| = C + ne tan = C + (n Pf) tan
(7.9)
(7.10)
Shifting of Mohr circle to lower compressive stress may lead to hydraulic fracturing
via following processes:
If the differential stress [(1 - 3) or (1e - 3e)], which represents the size of the
Mohr circle, is small and 3e = T0, then extension fractures can form (Fig. 7.3a).
If the differential stress is relatively large, the Pf may drive the Mohr circle far to
the left to touch the fracture envelope and shear fracturing may occur (fig. 7.3b).
Putting it together we may state that given the initial state of stress in the rock is
within the stable part of the Mohr diagram, the fluid pressure may be increased to a
level that the Mohr circle for state of effective stress may touch the fracture envelope
for fracturing to occur. In order to increase the permeability of hydrocarbon reservoir
rocks, artificial hydraulic fracturing is carried out by pumping fluids through oil wells.
Strength and ductility of rocks increase with mean stress. The pore fluid pressure
reduces mean stress and makes rocks weaker and more brittle. Therefore, high fluid
pressure may lead to brittle fracturing at depths normally associated with ductile
deformation.
59
60
8. Faults
A fault is a brittle shear fracture along which appreciable amount of differential
displacement has taken place. This rather straightforward and generally accepted
definition of faults has one serious problem, i.e., with the word appreciable. The
displacements along faults may vary from microscopic to hundreds or thousands of km
on very large faults, such as transcurrent faults. Therefore, what constitutes a
displacement to be appreciable depends on the scale of observation. For example, a
geologist working on regional faults pattern may dismiss a fault seen at an outcrop
with centimeter/millimeter-scale displacement as minor shear fractures or microfaults. A
fault with few hundred meters of displacement may lead to the formation of a good
trap for hydrocarbon accumulation but may not show up on a regional-scale seismic
survey.
A fault may occur as one sharp plane of discontinuity (Fig. 8.1a) or as a zone of
closely spaced planes of discontinuity (Fig. 8.1b). The discontinuity surfaces are the
brittle shear fractures. Faults at depth may not have such sharp discontinuities; instead
the deformation may be distributed in a diffused zone. Such zones of distributed
deformation are called ductile shear zone (Fig. 8.1c). The maximum strain in a ductile
shear zone is at the middle of the zone and gradually decreases to zero at the shear
zone wall. In some cases a fault zone may have components of both brittle and ductile
deformations (Fig. 8.1d).
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
Figure 8.1. Styles of faulting. (a) Brittle fault on a single surface. (b) Brittle fault
zone consisting of several subsidiary fault surfaces. (c) Ductile shear zone. (d)
Brittle-ductile shear zone.
61
Blind/emergent: If tip line does not reach the ground surface the fault is blind.
When the tip line is exposed to the ground surface it is an emergent fault. A
blind fault may become emergent through erosion.
emergent fault
blind fault
compressional decollement
tip
fault trace
tip line
tip line
fault
surface
extensional decollement
hangingwall
cut-off point
emergent fault
tip
blind fault
compressional detachment
footwall
cut-off point
listric fault
hangingwall
block
hangingwall
cut-off line
footwall
cut-off line
footwall
block
extensional detachment
N
D
N : Net slip
D: Dip slip
S : Strike-slip
component
H : Horizontal
component
V : Vertical
component
Splay faults
isolated
splay
diverging
splay
b.p.
rejoining
splay
connecting
splay
b.l.
b.p.
t.l.
b.l.
b.l.
b.p. - branch point
b.l. - branch line
t.l. - tip line
m ain
fa ult
62
Branch line: The line of intersection between any two fault surfaces is known as
the branch line. If the faults crop out at the surface, this line will appear as the
branch point. In sections, they appear as branch point.
Cut-off line: The line along which a marker horizon is truncated by a fault. For
the same marker horizon there are two cut-off lines on two sides of a fault (e.g.
hangingwall cut-off line and footwall cut-off line for inclined faults). In sections,
they appear as cut-off point.
Fault trace: The line along which the fault plane cuts the ground surface is
known as fault trace. Blind faults do not have fault trace!
Hangingwall/footwall: For an inclined fault, the block above the fault surface is
known as hangingwall and the block below the fault plane is known as
footwall. In a tunnel parallel to the fault surface, the hangingwall literally hangs
overhead and the footwall lie under the foot of an observer. For a fault with
vertical dip, there is no hangingwall or footwall.
Listric fault: A fault with smoothly curving surface is called a listric fault.
Separation: The distance between points on cut-off lines on either side of fault.
The separation distance varies depending on the direction in which it is
measured. The horizontal separation is the separation in a horizontal plane and
may or may not equal the strike-slip component.
Slip on a fault: The distance between two points on the fault plane those were
together before faulting, represents total displacement or net slip. The net slip is
a vector quantity. The net slip can be resolved into strike-slip and dip-slip
components. The dip-slip component can further be resolved into a horizontal
component and a vertical component.
63
Splay: A secondary fault (i.e., smaller in size and displacement) that emerges
from a main fault. There are different types of splays. A connecting splay
connects two faults whereas a rejoining splay rejoins the same fault from which it
branched off. When a splay fault branches off and diverges away from a fault, it
is called diverging splay. From an isolated splay no other fault branches off.
Tip line: Individual faults are always of limited extent and displacement die
away to zero. The line along which fault displacement becomes zero is known
as tip line (tip or tip point in two dimensions). Tip line may emerge on the
erosion surface as tip point or it may remain blind.
Dip-slip faults: These faults have dominant dip-slip component. The strike-slip
component is small or negligible. They are of two types: (1) Dip-slip faults in
which hangingwall moves down relative to the footwall are called normal fault.
The dip of normal faults is usually 50 or more. They are sometimes called
extensional fault, as they are more common in extensional tectonic set up, such as
divergent plate margins. (2) Reverse faults are those in which hangingwall moves
up relative to footwall block. A reverse fault in which dip of the fault surface is
less than 45 are called thrust fault. They are sometimes called compressional fault,
as they are more common in compressional tectonic set up, such as convergent
plate margins.
64
Oblique-slip faults: In these faults the strike-slip and dip-slip components are
approximately same. They may be right normal, right reverse, left normal and
right reverse depending on whether the opposite walls move clockwise or
counterclockwise and whether hangingwall moves up or down relative to
footwall.
Normal
Reverse
Sinistral
Right normal
Right reverse
Dextral
Left normal
Left reverse
The normal, reverse and strike-slip faults are the most common types of faults.
They typically form in extensional, compressional and translation tectonic regimes,
respectively. The terms strike fault, dip fault, transverse fault, wrench fault, tear fault,
transcurrent fault, hade, throw, and heave should not be used because some of them
are obsolete while others are imprecise and may create confusion.
65
In shallow-level faulting one of the principal stress directions is vertical. This is due to
the fact that the earth-air interface is a plane of no shear. Vertical 1, 2 and 3
leads to normal, strike-slip and reverse faults, respectively. These are the three
most common types of faults, as noted earlier.
D U
U D
1
(a)
3
(b)
2
(c)
The Anderson's theory of faulting does not predict some of the commonly observed
features associated with faulting, such as, high-angle reverse faults, very low-dipping
and very high-dipping normal faults, listric faults and transform faults. Yet, it remains
a simple and elegant way of describing how faults form in different tectonic settings.
66
Geomorphic features: The most obvious geomorphic feature that may betray the
presence of a fault is fault scarp (Fig. 8.5). Fault scarps are continuous linear
features characterized by sudden break in topographic slopes. They may
indicate either active or inactive faults. However, the original scarp associated
with an old and inactive fault may not survive erosion for very long. Regular
fault scarps are more commonly associated with normal faults (Fig. 8.5a).
Subsidiary smaller scarps are usually present parallel to the main scarp. The
uplifted block is usually cut by V-shaped side valleys. The erosional debris
derived from the uplifted block and brought along the side valleys form alluvial
fans on the downthrown block. Successive movements along faults may leave
perched alluvial terraces on the side valleys. The scarps formed due to thrust
faulting tend to be irregular (Fig. 8.5b). An interesting feature associated with
thrusting is that the fault often overrides the debris derived from the uplifted
hangingwall and deposited in front of the scarp. In strike-slip faulting the scarp
is usually small and of local importance (Fig. 8.5b). Deflected or offset
geomorphic features, such as, river channels, hogbacks and ridges may indicate
the presence of strike-slip faulting. The scarps associated with large faults may
show up as lineament satellite images and air photographs. But it must be
remembered that a majority of lineaments drawn on satellite images are not
faults. Unfortunately, there is a rising but very unscientific tendency in some
quarters to draw lineaments on satellite images, construct a rose diagram and
deduce stress axes. Surface exposures of faults must be sought out during
67
Strike-slip fault
Normal fault
Main fault scarp
Thrust fault
Perched terrace
Subsidiary fault scarp
Alluvial fan
Local scarp
Irregular scarp
Erosion debris
(a)
(b)
(c)
Main fault
Subsidiary fault
Figure 8.5. Geomorphic features associated with three main types of faulting.
2 km
F1
N
1
F2
F3
2
3
F1
F2
7
3
2
8
1
2
(a)
(b)
Figure 8.6. Recognition of faults from map patterns. (a) Offsets of rock units
trace faults. Symmetric repetition of rock units in the N-S direction around
rocks 1 and 4 are due to folding. The fault surfaces trace lines of discontinuities
along which three rock units meet. (b) Omission and repetition of rock units
trace faults F1 and F2.
Geological map and stratigraphy: Large faults are relatively easy to recognize in
regions of moderate to excellent exposures of rocks through systematic
mapping. One should be careful, however, because some of the geologic
features are common to both faults and unconformities. Faults are recognized
on the basis of truncation and offset of one or more rock units (Fig. 8.6a).
68
Truncation and offset occur along a line on a map that defines a discontinuity
along which three rocks meet at a point. Such a map pattern may also indicate
angular unconformity if rocks on two sides of the discontinuity are of different
ages. In case of faults, same rock units should be present on both sides of the
discontinuity. This relation may not be valid for large overthrusts, which may
bring older rocks to lie over younger rocks or may even bring metamorphic
rocks on top of sedimentary rocks. The map patterns due to truncation and
offset vary considerably depending on the orientations of faults relative to the
orientations of rock layers affected by faulting, and amount and direction of
slip. The map patterns may become even more complex if the terrain had an
earlier history of folding and faulting. A common effect of truncation and offset
is an apparent horizontal shifting of the rock units. There may not be any
truncation and offset if the strike of the fault is same as the strike of the rock
units. In such cases, faults can be recognized on the basis of repetition and
omission of strata if the stratigraphy of the rock units is known (Fig. 8.6b). The
line along which a packet of rock units are repeated (fault F1 in Fig. 8.6b) or
some ofthe rock units are omitted (fault F2 in Fig. 8.6b) marks a fault plane.
Symmetric repetition of rock units about a particular rock unit due to folding
(see Fig. 8.6a) should not be confused with simple repetition due to faulting. In
drill wells, missing or repetition of beds can be used to predict faults.
69
depths of 1-4 km; below this depth cataclastic rocks are cohesive. Frictional
heating during brittle faulting can be sufficient high to melt a small portion of
the rock. The melt may intrude into surrounding fractures and quenched to
give veins of pseudotachylite. Mylonitic rocks form if faulting occurs at depths
exceeding 10 to 15 km. These are fine-grained rocks with grain size reduction
via dynamic recrystallization and neomineralization. Mortar texture with
highly strained clasts in a matrix of fine-grained recrystallized grains is a typical
texture in these rocks. Planar and linear fabrics are common in mylonites. This
texture is a characteristic feature of ductile shear zones. The development of
textures and structures in fault zones depend on several parameters including
strain, strain rate, temperature, pressure and pore fluid pressure. Therefore, it is
not possible to make simple correlation between depth of faulting and type of
textures and structures in fault rocks.
70
strike-slip fault
(a)
(b)
normal fault
(c)
(d)
71
devastating 1964 Alaska earthquake near Anchorage is a rare example where absolute
movement of both the fault blocks with respect to an external reference frame (sea
level) could be determined (Platker 1965). Measurements at one place where normal
faulting had occurred showed that both the fault blocks had moved upward one
block had moved more than the other. We can only hope to determine the orientation
of the displacement vector and the sense of shear movement in most outcrops of fault
or fault zone. The magnitude of the displacement can rarely be determined.
Differential displacements often lead to finely polished fault surfaces, called
slickenside surfaces. Ridge-in-groove or striation lineations commonly form on slickenside
surfaces in the direction of displacement. Growth of crystal fibers may result from fluid
flowing through small spaces opened up along fault surfaces. The crystal fibers trace
slickenfiber lineations, which also parallel displacement direction.
A large number of shear sense indicators have been proposed for both brittle and
ductile shear zones, some of which can be rather tenacious in most outcrops. A few
better indicators are discussed below:
Drag fold: If the walls of a fault undergo ductile deformation, then marker layers
may be dragged into fold forms (Fig. 8.8). These folds are called drag folds
whose hinge lines are parallel to the cut-off line and oriented at high angles to
displacement direction. The sense of shear displacement is opposite to the
curvature of the fold. Drag folds do not form if the cut-off lines are at low angle
to the slip direction. Reverse drag associated with rollover anticlines have
opposite sense of displacement to that of drag folds.
(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 8.8. (a,b) Drag folds giving sense of displacement. The beds are dragged
into the faults in the direction opposite to the sense of displacement. (c)
Opposite sense of displacement in reverse drag in rollover anticline.
72
slickenfiber
steps
(a)
(b)
s-surface
c-surface
(c)
(d)
median line
center line
(f)
(e)
En-echelon gash veins and asymmetric folds: These features develop in ductile shear
zones. En-echelon gash veins are tension veins formed normal to maximum
stretching direction (Fig. 8.9b). Acute angles formed by gash veins and shear
zone walls typically point in the direction opposite to the direction of shear
displacement. The axial planes of asymmetric folds are oriented normal to the
73
S-C fabric: Schistosity is well-developed in many ductile shear zones (Fig. 8.9c).
Owing to heterogeneous strain the schistosity surfaces (s-surfaces) are usually
sigmoidally curved. Within shear zones, zones of high and low strains parallel
the shear zone walls and give rise to a schistosity (c-surfaces) oriented parallel
to the shear zone walls. Overall the shear zone displays what is known as s-c
fabric. The acute angle between s and c surfaces point to the shear direction.
- and -structures: These structures are formed around porphyroclasts and are
best seen in oriented thin sections under microscope (Passchier and Simpson
1986). The shape of the asymmetric pressure shadow trails containing
dynamically crystallized grains defines these two types of structures. In structure (Fig. 8.9e), the median lines drawn through the pressure shadow do
not cross the center line drawn through the center of the clast and oriented
parallel to the average cleavage surface. In -structure (Fig. 8.9f), the median
lines cross center lines. The orientations of pressure shadows relative to sense of
shear are shown in Figs. 8.9e, f.
All the shear sense indicators in Fig. 8.9 are right-handed or dextral. If we look at
the same indicators from the backside of the page, they will all appear to left-handed or
sinistral. Therefore, it is not sufficient to state that the displacement is dextral or
sinistral. The movement of blocks with respect to geographic coordinates should also
be known for definitive interpretation.
74
9. Thrust Faults
Low angle (dip < 45) reverse faults are frequently termed as thrusts or thrust faults.
Thrust faults are much more common than steeply dipping reverse faults. The thrust
faults are dip-slip faults with zero or negligible strike-slip component of displacement.
They are abundant in the upper crustal levels of the external zones of compressional
orogenic zones. Consequently, they are also referred to as contractional faults by some
workers. They bring older rocks to lie over younger rocks and often result in large-scale
vertical duplication of regionally sub-horizontal strata. Thrusts cause elevation of
hangingwall relative to footwall giving rise to irregular fault scarps. They range in scale
from millimeters to meters, through tens to hundreds of kilometers in fold-thrust belts
to thousands in kilometers in convergent plate margins.
Over the years a plethora of thrust fault-related terminologies have been proposed
in the literature, many of them with obscure meaning. Terminologies defined here are
mostly after McClay (1992) who made a brave attempt to bring in a sense of sanity in
an otherwise chaotic and often confusing set of terminologies littered through
literature.
75
Cut-off line
Fault surface
Ramp
Flat
Flat
Ram
p
Flat
(a)
Ramp
Flat
Flat
RamFlat
p
(b)
Cut-off point
Hangingwall side
of the thrust
Tectonic transport
direction
HWR
HWF
HWR
HWF
Oblique
ramp
Lateral
ramp
Frontal
ramp
(c)
FWF
FWR
FWF
FWR
Footwall side
of the thrust
FWF
(d)
Figure 9.1. (a,b) Flat-ramp-flat (stair-case) thrust trajectory in 2-D and 3-D. (c)
Hangingwall and footwall blocks separated to illustrate ramps and flats in the two
blocks. FWF: footwall flat, FWR: footwall ramp, HWF: hangingwall flat, HWR:
hangingwall ramp. (d) Ramp in 3-D showing frontal, oblique and lateral ramps.
Ramp: The moderately-dipping part (at the time of initiation) of a thrust. Ramps
usually climb up-section across stiffer layers.
Hangingwall flat (HWF): The portion of the thrust where the fault is parallel to
the bedding surfaces on the hangingwall side.
Hangingwall ramp (HWR): The portion of the thrust where the fault is oblique to
the bedding surfaces on the hangingwall side.
Footwall flat (FWF): The portion of the thrust where the fault is parallel to the
bedding surfaces on the footwall side.
Footwall ramp (FWR): The portion of the thrust where the fault is oblique to the
bedding surfaces on the footwall side.
Frontal ramp: The strike of the ramp is perpendicular to the regional tectonic
transport direction.
Lateral ramp: The strike of the ramp is parallel to the regional tectonic transport
direction.
Oblique ramp: The strike of the ramp is oblique to the regional tectonic transport
direction.
76
Thrust trajectory: The trace of a thrust on a cross section. Thrust faults always cut
up-section in undeformed rock but may cut down section in previously folded
terrains.
Flats and ramps on thrust trajectory, and hangingwall footwall flats and ramps are
different aspects of flat-ramp geometry.
Hinterland-vergent thrust: The hangingwall of the thrust fault moves towards the
hinterland.
Hinterland-dipping thrust: The dip of the thrust is towards the hinterland. This
type of thrust is also called forethrust because the vergence is towards the
foreland.
Foreland-vergent thrust: The hangingwall of the thrust fault moves towards the
foreland.
Ramp anticline
Hinterland
Foreland vergent
(a)
Ramp anticline
Hinterland vergent
(b)
Figure 9.2. (a) Thrust vergence. (b) Pop-up structure.
77
Foreland
Foreland-dipping thrust: The dip of the thrust is towards the foreland. This type
of thrust is also called backthrust because the vergence is towards the
hinterland.
Thrust sheet: The areal extent of the hangingwall block of a regionally important
low-angle thrust is commonly much greater than the thickness. Such a tabularshaped hangingwall block is called a thrust sheet. Thrust sheets are given the
same name as the underlying thrusts, such as Jutogh thrust sheet and Jutogh
thrust in Himachal Himalayas.
Thrust nappe: The French word nappe means a sheet and, therefore, thrust sheet
and thrust nappe should be synonymous. However, the term thrust nappe is
reserved for thrust sheets with significant movement (>10 km) relative to
footwall.
Allochthon: An adjective used to describe a thrust sheet that has moved large
distance from its original position. The rocks within an allochthon are thus
geologically out of place and are called allochthonous. Obviously, allochthon and
nappe are closely related terms.
Parautochthon: An adjective used describe a thrust sheet that has smaller relative
displacement as compared to allochthon.
Autochthon: A large region of rock that has not moved from its original position
is called autochthon. The rocks within an autochthon are called autochthonous.
The basement rocks underlying a thrust are autochthonous.
Overthrust: A large thrust in which the hangingwall (i.e., the thrust) has actually
moved relative to footwall.
Underthrust: A large thrust in which the footwall (i.e., the thrust) has actually
moved relative to hangingwall.
78
Root zone: The region in the hinterland direction where a thrust sheet passes into
the subsurface is known as root zone. No sense of origin or genetic overtones
should be attached to this term.
Allochthonous rocks
Klippe
Window
Root zone
Autochthonous rocks
5 km
Figure 9.3. Cross section of thrust sheet showing allochthon and autochthon as
well as window and klippe.
Leading anticline/syncline pair: If the ramp anticline is flat crested, the anticline
and syncline pair located towards the transport direction of the ramp anticline.
Trailing anticline/syncline pair: If the ramp anticline is flat crested, the anticline
and syncline pair located in the direction opposite to the transport direction of
the ramp anticline.
Forelimb: The fold limb of the ramp anticline located towards the transport
direction is termed as forelimb.
Backlimb: The fold limb of the ramp anticline located opposite to the forelimb is
termed as backlimb.
79
Leading edge: The edge of a thrust sheet towards the transport direction.
Trailing edge: The edge of a thrust sheet in the direction opposite to the transport
direction.
Hinterland
Transport
Foreland
direction
trailing
anticline
trailing
syncline
trailing
edge
backlimb
axial
surface
leading
anticline
ramp
anticline
leading
syncline
forelimb
ramp
anticline
leading
edge
Regional
80
Duplex
Roof thrust
Imbricate fan
(a)
Floor thrust
Link thrusts
(b)
Figure 9.5. Two main types of thrust systems duplex (a) and imbricate fan (b).
Note that in imbricate fan there is no roof thrust.
Duplexes
Geometry of a duplex depends on ramp angle, ramp height, initial thrust spacing
and displacement on individual thrusts. By varying these parameters, a bewildering
variety of duplex geometry can be obtained. A three-fold classification of duplexes is
shown in Fig. 9.6 (McClay 1992, modified after Mitra 1986): (1) independent ramp
anticlines and hinterland-dipping duplexes, (2) true duplexes including ramp anticline
footwall, ramp anticline hangingwall and frontal zone of ramp anticline, and (3)
overlapping ramp anticline including antiformal stack and foreland-dipping duplex.
The different types of duplexes are as follows (Figs. 9.6, 9.7):
Independent ramp anticline: The final thrust spacing is much larger than
displacement on individual thrusts leading to formation of widely spaced ramp
anticlines. Ramp anticlines do not interfere with each other.
Overlapping ramp anticlines: The horses stack up on top of each other in such a
way that the overall geometry is like an antiformal arch.
Corrugated or bumpy roof thrust: A duplex in which the roof thrust is corrugated.
Hinterland-dipping duplex: Both link thrusts and bedding dip towards hinterland.
With increased displacement, independent ramp anticlines grade into
hinterland-dipping duplex.
81
Foreland-dipping duplex: At least part of link thrusts and bedding within the
duplex dip towards foreland. With increased displacement, hinterland-dipping
duplex may grade into foreland-dipping duplex.
Frontal zone of ramp anticline: The duplex is at the front of a ramp anticline.
Passive roof duplex: A duplex in which sequence above the roof thrust has not
been displaced towards the foreland.
Independent ramp anticline
Hinterland-slopping duplexes
Increased
displacement
True duplex
Foreland-dipping duplex
Increased displacement
Planar roof duplex: A duplex in which top of the roof thrust is planar.
82
True duplex: Parts of all the link thrusts and roof thrust are parallel to the frontal
ramp.
Roof thrust
Floor thrust
Corrugated
roof thrust
Breaching
thrusts
Tip of buried
thrust
Blind imbricate fan: All the thrusts are buried below the erosion surface. Folding
at higher structural level compensates the displacement along buried thrusts.
Erosion level
Figure 9.8. Types of imbricate fans. (a) Leading imbricate fan with maximum
slip on the frontal most thrust. (b) Trailing imbricate fan with maximum slip on
83
the trailing thrust. (c) A blind imbricate fan with folding as the surface
manifestation.
Triangle zones
A combination of two thrusts with the same basal detachment but with
opposing vergence forms a triangular zone (Fig. 9.9a). A pop-up structure (Fig. 9.2b) is
also type of triangular zone. An intercutaneous thrust wedge (Fig. 9.9b) is bound by a
floor thrust at the base and a passive roof thrust at the top.
84
horses occupying the area in between. The entire process can be repeated as many
times as desired. In this model, the height and angle of the ramps, slip on individual
ramps and spacing between ramps are same during sequential development of ramps.
This leads to rather regular geometry of the duplex. By varying these parameters
different types of duplexes can be generated. For example, by increasing ramp spacing
and keeping all other parameters same we could we could have generated independent
ramp anticlines instead of hinterland-dipping duplex shown in Fig. 9.10. Or, we could
generate an overlapping ramp anticline, antiformal stack or foreland-dipping duplex
by increasing displacements on the thrusts.
Foreland
Major thrust sheet
So
Incipient fracture
S1
Horse
S2
Roof thrust
Floor thrust
S3
85
(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 9.11. Thrust sequences. Numbers indicate the order in which thrusts
developed. (a) Forward-breaking in-sequence thrusts. (b) Break-back insequence thrusts. (c) Out-of-sequence thrusts.
86
Piggy-back thrust sequence: This sequence occurs when older thrusts are carried
piggy-back style by younger thrusts; essentially same as forward-breaking
thrust sequence.
both hangingwall and footwall blocks move upward but footwall moves more
than the footwall
Well
hangingwall block
fault surface
net slip
footwall block
(a)
(b)
Figure 10.1. Normal fault. (a) Hangingwall in a normal fault goes down relative
to footwall. Net slip gives the orientation of the slip vector, which is oriented
down the dip of the fault surface. Younger beds lie above older beds across the
fault surface. (b) In a drill well, normal faults may be recognized from missing
beds.
87
The displacement vectors (i.e., the net slip) in normal faults are oriented almost
down the dip of the fault plane such that they have either zero or negligible strike-slip
component (Fig. 10.1). In previously undeformed sedimentary terrains, younger beds
lie above older beds across fault surfaces where a part of the stratigraphic succession
goes missing. Missing strata in drill wells commonly suggest normal faulting. It should
be remembered that the nature of omission and offset of strata depends on the
orientation of the fault surface relative to the orientation of beds involved in folding.
Therefore, caution must be exercised while interpreting seismic reflection profiles
owing to the fact that a normal fault with zero or negligible dip-slip component may
look similar to a strike-slip component with small dip-slip component. The name
normal does not indicate that this type of fault is more common than the other types.
This term originated in British coal mines where such faults were common. If a coal
seam was truncated by a fault, the normal practice was to continue the drive for
some distance and sink a shaft to find the missing coal seam. The normal faults are
commonly thought to be steeply inclined with a dip of about 60. More than three
thousand fault dip measurements from 122 faults in British Coalfields show that 70
dip (standard deviation = 9) on normal faults is a better approximation than the
commonly accepted value of 60 (Walsh and Watterson 1988). They are the dominant
structural elements in areas where crustal rocks undergo subhorizontal stretching
accompanied by subvertical shortening, such as oceanic and continental rift zones (Fig.
10.2). The steep dips of normal faults are in conformity with Adersonian model of
faulting. However, it is now widely recognized that low-angle normal faults are also
common in extensional tectonics.
Increased interest in normal faults and extensional tectonics in the last two to three
decades has resulted in a set of complex and often confusing terminology. For a
glossary of normal fault and related terminology see Peacock et al. (2000) and
references therein.
88
Normal faults with about 50-70 dip commonly occur in conjugate pairs and lead
to the formation of horst-and-graben structure (Fig. 10.2) (Cloos 1955, 1968). The bisector
of the acute angle (about 40-60) between a pair of conjugate normal faults is subvertical and is parallel to the maximum compressive stress direction. The minimum
compressive stress direction is horizontal and parallel to the bisector of the obtuse
angle between the conjugate faults. Therefore, moderately to steeply-dipping conjugate
normal faults are in conformity with Andersonian model of faulting. Spectacular and
active horst-and-graben structures can be found at mid-oceanic ridges and continental
rift zones such east African Rift. Many inactive and old horst-and-graben structures,
buried under growth or later sediments have been imaged through seismic reflection
profiling (Fig. 10.3).
Suez
Rift-border fault
Intra-rift fault
Syn-post-rift
Pre-rift/basement
Dip domain
Ver tical
shortening
Graben
Hors t
Graben
Sinai
Rift-border
fa ult
(a)
Rift-border
fault
Horizontal
extension
Gulf of
Suez
Egypt
(b)
Figure 10.2. (a) Schematic diagram of horst-and-graben structure in areas of
horizontal extension showing principal structural elements of a rift system. (b)
Map of northern part of Red Sea rift system (after Khalil and McClay 2002).
89
Rift zones: These are narrow and elongated zones of subsidence consequent
upon crustal-scale extensions (Fig. 10.2). They are present both on continents
(e.g., East African rift zone) and on ocean floor (e.g., mid-oceanic ridge). Horstand-graben structures commonly occur in rift zones. Owing to thinning of the
crust, high heat flow and magmatic activity may be associated with rift zones.
0
TWT (sec)
Lr. Tertiary
Up. Tertiary
2
Palaeozoic
Palaeozoic
Rift-border fault: Rift zones are usually bound by a pair of normal faults dipping
towards the middle of the zone. These faults represent the boundary of the rift
zones and are called rift-border fault or basin-margin fault (Fig. 10.2).
Intra-rift fault: Faults of smaller magnitude than rift-border faults occur inside
the rift zone and are called intra-rift faults (Fig. 10.2).
90
Horst
half-grabens
half-grabens
Listric
fault
Detachment
fault
Detachment
fault
Figure 10.4. Main faults with concave upward listric trajectory gradually
become detachment fault at depth. Subsidiary imbricate faults in the
hangingwall may terminate (left hand side) or merge (right hand side) with the
detachment fault. Half-grabens are bound by only one main fault.
2
3
91
92
Extension fractures
(a)
block rotation
(b)
growth sediments
block rotation
new faults old faults
(c)
(d)
Figure 10.6. Bookshelf or domino model of faulting. See text for discussion.
The initial fractures probably develop as vertical extension fractures (as opposed to
Coulomb fractures) within retaining walls in response to horizontal stretching (Fig. 10.
6a). As the unfaulted walls move away, the faulted blocks collapse sideways and
undergo rotation with normal sense of shearing displacement exactly the same way as
books in a library bookshelf falls sideways if a book is removed (Fig. 10.6b). The angle
of rotation faults is same as the dip of the beds if the rotation of fault block is rigidbody type and originally beds were horizontal,. The half-grabens formed above the
rotating blocks may be filled up with syntectonic sediments called growth sediments.
The growth sediments are cut by faults and sediments are thicker in the hangingwall
near the fault than in the footwall. This suggests that faulting was active during
sedimentation. Such faults are called growth faults. After a certain amount of rotation, it
may be mechanically more efficient to develop new, steeply oriented fractures rather
than continue to rotate on the old faults (Fig. 10.6c). The bedding planes and old faults
continue to rotate as block rotation is transferred onto new faults (Fig. 10.6d). The old
faults may become sub-horizontal or may eventually dip in the direction opposite to
which they were initiated. They may apparently look like thrust faults but can still be
93
recognized as normal faults because younger rocks in the hangingwall will ride over
older rocks in footwall. This idealized and rather nave model does reproduce
geometric relations in differently oriented fault blocks commonly found in extensional
basins. However, very large horizontal stretching in extensional basins cannot be
accounted by bookshelf faulting alone because even with high angle of rotation
extension remains rather low.
Upwelling of footwall
due to stripping of
hangingwall
Detachment fault
94
Antithetic fault: Antithetic faults (also called counter faults) are subsidiary to a
dominant fault or fault set and the antithetic faults dip in the direction opposite
to the direction in which the dominant fault dips (Fig. 10.9). The sense of shear
in antithetic faults is opposite to that of the dominant fault. Development of a
set of antithetic faults in the hangingwall may solve to a large extent the
compatibility problem associated with listric faulting (Fig. 10.8d). The antithetic
faults may also have listric trajectory.
95
gap
(a)
(b)
Fold
(c)
Faults
(d)
Figure 10.8. Compatibilty problem in listric fault (after Twiss and Moores 1992).
(a) Incipient fracturing of with listric trajectory. (b) Movement of hangingwall
opens up a large and geologically untenable gap. (d) Compatibility problem
may be solved through distribution deformation in the hangingwall leading to
the formation of rollover anticline. (d) Compatibility problem may also be
solved through antithetic faulting in the hangingwall. Note that small gaps are
present below the faulted blocks.
Graben
Main
fault
Main
fault
Synthetic
faults
Antithetic
faults
Figure 10.9. Antithetic and synthetic faults associated listric main faults in a
graben.
Synthetic faults: These faults are minor or subsidiary faults with same sense of
shear and similar orientations as the related major fault (Fig. 10.9). Antithetic
and synthetic faults may form a conjugate pair.
Rider: Formation of a second, and then sequential subsidiary faults cutting back
into the undeformed footwall give rise to wedge-shaped segments in crosssection between faults. These are called riders (Fig. 10.10a). The riders develop
in-sequence towards the footwall (Fig. 10.11). Each rider is bound by a roof fault
and a floor or sole fault. The roof faults on riders passively rotate on the lower
active fault. Riders can be both synthetic and antithetic. At high extensions,
riders can get detached from each other may look like horst-and-graben
structure in seismic sections (Figs. 10.10c,d).
96
Ri
de
Footwall
r
Sol
eo
rF
(a)
Hangingwall
R i R oo
d e f fa
u lt
r
loo
r fa
ul t
7
2
(b)
Riders
Growth sediments
Detached riders at
high extensions
(c)
(d)
Sole fault
Listric fan: A set of synthetic riders form a listric fan, also called horsetail faults
(Fig. 10.10a).
Reverse listric fan: A set of riders antithetic to the main listric fault but rest on the
hangingwall is called reverse listric fan (Fig. 10.10b).
Roof fault: The topmost fault in a listric or reverse listric fan (Fig. 10.10a).
Floor fault: The lowermost fault in a listric or reverse listric fan (Fig. 10.10a).
97
Central ridge
5
4
Listric fan
3
2
Counter
fan
3
1 2
Extensional duplex
Figure 10.11. A composite diagram showing listric fan, counter fan and
extensional duplex. The numbers indicate sequence of fault development.
98
99
sinistral
net slip
fault surface
(a)
(b)
dextral
Figure 11.1. (a) Strike slip fault showing displacement vector, which is
essentially horizontal. (b) Sinistral (left-handed) and dextral (right-handed)
sense of displacement.
100
oceanic ridges (Fig. 11.2). There are three unusual aspects about displacement on
transform faults: (1) displacement remains constant throughout the fault and then ends
abruptly, (2) the actual sense of displacement is opposed to what can be inferred from
offsets of geologic features, and (3) two sub-parallel faults may have opposite sense of
movements. The offset graben system in Fig. 11.2 suggests sinistral movement but the
actual displacement is dextral.
transform fault
sense of diplacement
opposite to ridge offset
mid-oceanic
rift system
101
11.4a,b) and left-handed (Figs. 11.4c,d) jogs. These right- and left-handed senses of shift
and sense of shear on fault surfaces lead to two situations:
line of bearing
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
Figure 11.3. En-echelon strike-slip fault system. All the faults in an enechelon system are inclined at a constant angle to a reference line, called
line of bearing. The sense of shift of adjacent faults is either right-handed
(a, b) or left-handed (c, d). The sense of shear displacement on the faults
are either left-handed (a, c) or right-handed (b, d).
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
Figure 11.4. The strike-slip faults with bends (or jogs) in strike line. (a,b)
Right-handed jog. (c,d) Left-handed jog. (a, c) Right-handed shear
displacement. (b, d) Left-handed shear displacement.
The shear sense on fault and sense of en-echelon shift or jog are same (Figs.
11.5a,b). In this case, translation due to faulting is accompanied by extension set
up in the zone of overlap between en-echelon faults or in the zone where fault
trace is curved. Such combination of translation and extension is termed as
transtension. Structures typical of extensional deformation may develop in
transtension zones. The most common large-scale structure is pull-apart basin,
which is a rhomb-shaped graben (Fig. 11.6.. Normal faults in a pull-apart basin
are oriented initially at about 45-50 to the strike-slip fault. This angle increases
102
as normal fault block rotates with increasing shear. These basins may get
sediments derived through erosions and denudation of topographically higher
regions bounding the graben. On a smaller scale, local depressions may lead to
the formation of sag ponds, which may be site of temporary or permanent lake.
The normal faults in the graben may have concave upward shape and merge
with the main strike slip fault. The faults may have significant amount of both
strike-slip and dip-slip components. Such a structure is called normal (or
negative) flower (or tulip) structure (Fig. 11.7a).
zone of
transtension
(a)
(b)
zone of
transpression
(c)
(d)
normal
faults
(a)
thrust
fault
fold axial
trace
(b)
103
The shear sense on fault and sense of en-echelon shift or jog are opposed (Figs.
11.5c,d). A combination of translation and compression follows and a zone of
transpression forms. The compression may to local vertical uplift of a rhombshaped region, called pressure ridges. On a larger-scale, the compression may
lead to the formation of folds and thrusts. The axial traces and fault traces will
be oriented initially at 45-50 to the strike-slip faults. With increasing shear
along the main strike-slip fault, the axial and fault traces may rotate towards the
main fault. The thrust faults with concave downward shape may also have
significant strike-slip component. These thrust faults may have the geometry of
a reverse (or positive) flower structure (Fig. 11.7b).
(a)
(b)
Figure 11.7. (a) Normal or negative flower structure. (b) Reverse or positive
flower structure.
104
then the fault block will be compressed and structures such as reverse faults or folds
Fa
ste
Slo
we
Slo
we
r
Sl
o
we
r
Fa
ste
r
F as
t er
may form.
R2
Main strikeslip fault
P
R1
Figure 11.9. Subsidiary shear fractures developed in association with righthanded strike-slip fault.
11.4 Subsidiary shear fractures
The strike-slip faults may be associated with wide range of subsidiary shear
fractures. The most important of these are Riedel shears or R shears. They were originally
recognized in laboratory experiments in which a layer of clay was deformed overlying
a sharply defined vertical strike-slip fault generated by two rigid blocks sliding past
each other. Two sets of en-echelon shear fractures developed in the clay layer, one
lying at 10-15 and the other at 75-80 to the underling fault surface (Fig. 11.8). They are
designated as R1 and R2, respectively. The R1 has the same sense of movement as the
105
main strike-slip fault, but the R2 has opposite sense of movement. That is, if the main
strike-slip fault has dextral sense of shear then the R1 and R2 shears have dextral and
sinistral sense of displacement. In other words, the R1 and R2 are synthetic and
antithetic respectively. Another type of subsidiary shear, called P shears, synthetic to
main fault and symmetrical to R shears may also develop. Subsidiary shears on large
scale can form a complex and anastomosing network of faults. The geometry and
kinematics of such a complex network of faults may be difficult to interpret.
106
107
12. Folds
Folds are regular wavelike undulations traced by sideways deflections of layers or
surfaces in rocks. They occur in scales ranging from microscopic, through outcrop or
mountain sides and cliffs to tens of km in orogenic core zones. Folds are very common
in metamorphic tectonites formed in response to ductile deformation in the deeper part
of the crust. They also form in the shallow crustal depths in sedimentary or very lowgrade metamorphic rocks in the flanks of major orogenic zones. The terminology for
the purpose of geometric description of folds has evolved over a long period of time.
The terminology is rather extensive, not always consistent and some of them have
genetic implications. However, we recognize that descriptive terminology should be
devoid of any genetic implications. Folds are traced by layers, such as sedimentary
beds, veins, dikes and metamorphic and igneous bands. Folds may also be considered
to have been traced by single surfaces, such as bedding and cleavage surfaces. The
geometry of single folded surfaces should be treated separately from the geometry of
folded layers.
108
Hinge line: The hinge line is the line along which the folded surface has
maximum (positive or negative) curvature. On a cross section, hinge line will
obviously be represented by a point, called hinge point. Both hinge line and
hinge point are simply called hinge. The hinge line can also be thought of as loci
of points of maximum curvature. The hinge line of a fold need not be a straight
line; it may be horizontal or plunging.
fold limb
hinge
zone
hi
ng
hinge
point
el
i ne
io
n
li n
e
li n
in
fl e
x
crest point
e
ng
hi
fold domain
inflexion
point
trough point
fold domain
hinge point
hinge line
depression
hinge line
culmination
kink fold
e
e li n
hing
hinge point
concentric fold
hinge point
hinge point
e
e li n
h in g
hinge point
Inflexion line: Inflexion lines mark zero curvature on a folded surface. The sign
of curvature changes (i.e., the sign of the second derivative) across the inflexion
lines. In other words, the sense of curvature of the folded surface changes, for
example from convex up to convex down. On a section, inflexion line is
represented by a point, called inflexion point.
109
Crest and trough: Crest and trough (line or point) of a fold represent highest and
lowest, respectively, topographic elevations on a folded surface. Crest and
trough may, but not necessarily, coincide with hinge.
Hinge line culmination and depression: If the plunge of hinge line varies, then there
should be areas where hinge line will attain highest and lowest elevations,
called hinge line culmination and depression, respectively.
Crest/trough line culmination and depression: Crest lines or trough line may also
have culminations and depressions, as with hinge lines.
Fold axis: It is an imaginary line on the folded surface, which when moved
parallel to itself generates the folded surface. Such folds are also called
cylindrical folds. The non-cylindrical folds surfaces do not have this property.
Hinge lines are straight in cylindrical folds. The terms fold axis and hinge line
are sometimes used synonymously, although they are not the same.
Hinge zone: The surface region around the hinge line where the curvature is
high is called a hinge zone. Although a single hinge per fold domain is common
in most folds, a single fold domain can have more than one hinge.
Fold limb: The surface region between inflexion line and hinge zone is known as
limb of a fold. Fold limbs can be straight or curved. A fold domain commonly
has two limbs.
Concentric fold: If the fold domain is part of a perfect circular arc, then the fold is
called a concentric fold. Hinge points in such cases are taken at the midpoints of
each of the fold arcs.
Kink fold: Folds with straight limbs and sharp hinge are called kink or chevron
folds. The curvature at the hinge is infinite and at limbs it is zero. Inflexion
points are taken at midpoints on the straight line segments of the folds.
110
Neutral
antifom
synform
Vertical
Younger
Older
Older
Younger
synformal
syncline
synformal
anticline
Younger
antiformal
anticline
Older
antiformal
syncline
Older
(e)
Monocline
saddle
Younger
inverted saddle
sheath fold
hinge line
hinge line
(d)
(k)
hinge line
non-cylindrical fol ds
Antiform: If the fold domain closes upward (-ve curvature), then the fold is
called antiform.
Anticline: In an anticline older rocks are located in the core of the fold.
Synform: In a synformal fold, the fold domain closes downward (+ve closure).
Syncline: If younger rocks are located in the core of the fold, the fold is syncline.
Neutral fold: When the fold domain closes sideways, the folds are called neutral
fold.
111
Vertical fold: A type of neutral folds in which both hinge lines and limbs are
vertical.
Overturned fold: If the two limbs of a fold dip in the same direction, it is called
overturned fold. In this type of fold, one of the limbs rotates more than 90 from
initial horizontal orientation.
Dome: A dome is an antiformal fold domain with hinge line culmination. Such a
fold has an approximate shape of a dome.
Basin: A dome is a synformal fold domain with hinge line depression. Such a
fold has an approximate shape of a basin.
Saddle: A type of antiform with hinge line depression giving rise to shape of a
saddle.
Sheath fold: If the hinge line curves more than 90, the fold domain may acquire
the shape of sheath of a knife or sword. A fold with this shape is called sheath
fold.
112
The above terms cannot be used in combination. For example, a fold cannot be tight
isoclinal but the tightness of a set of folds can range from tight to isoclinal.
inter-limb
angle
180o
120o
gentle
tangent
at i2
tangent
at i1
70o
open
30o
close
inflexion
point
i1
i2
tight
inflexion
point
isoclinal
0o
Figure 12.3. Interlimb angle and tightness of fold (after Fleuty 1964).
Axial trace: Trace of the axial surface on the topographic surface. The term axial
trace has nothing to do with fold axis. Axial trend (i.e., the trend of hinge line)
and axial trace may or may not be parallel.
113
Conjugate fold: A fold domain may have converging pair of axial surfaces and
such folds are called conjugate folds. Obviously, conjugate folds have two
hinges. The conjugate fold changes into a single-hinged fold where the two
axial surfaces meet.
Polyclinal fold: In this type of fold, there are more than two hinges in one fold
domain. Such folds are however rather rare.
axial surfaces
hinge line
two axial surfaces
merge to give one
axial surface
hinge line
fold ceases to exist
at this point
axial plane
Fold train: A fold train is a series of folds with alternating sense of curvature.
114
Fold
domain 1
A
W/2
W/2
median
surface
A
A: Amplitude
W: Wavelength
Fold
domain 2
axial plane
symmetric fold
asymmetric fold
parasitic fold
harmonic folds
disharmonic folds
median surface
anticlinoria-synclinoria
Symmetry: If the median surface and the axial surface are perpendicular to each
other and the axial surface divides the fold domain into mirror symmetric
quarter halves, the fold is symmetric. Otherwise the fold is asymmetric. The
symmetric folds are m-shaped and asymmetric folds are either s-shaped or zshaped.
Polyharmonic fold: If a fold train has two or more orders of folds it is called
polyharmonic fold. Each order of fold has its own characteristic wavelength and
amplitude.
115
Parasitic folds: In a polyharmonic fold, the folds with smallest wavelength and
amplitude are called parasitic folds.
60
30
Gently
inclined
Moderately
inclined
80
Steeply
inclined
90
00
Upright
10
Sub-horizontal
Sub-horizontal
0
10
Recumbent
Gently
plunging
300
Upright
Moderately
plunging
in
cl
n
I
ed
600
Steeply
plunging
800
Sub-vertical
0
90
Reclined
Vertical
Figure 12.6. Names of folds based on the orientation of axial plane and hinge
line (after Fleuty 1964).
116
Vertical: Folds with sub-vertical (>90) dip of axial plane and plunge of hinge
line are called vertical folds. As a consequence of this geometry, the folded
surface is also sub-vertical everywhere.
Recumbent: Folds with less than 10 dip of axial plane as well as plunge of hinge
line are called recumbent folds. The limbs of recumbent folds are also subhorizontal but dip at the hinge zone is vertical.
Reclined: In a reclined fold, dip direction of the axial surface is the same as the
trend of the hinge line. An equivalent statement is that the hinge plunges down
the dip of the axial surface.
Inclined: In this type of fold the dip of axial plane and plunge of hinge line vary
between 10-80.
(a) Upright
(b) Vertical
(c) Recumbent
(g) Reclined
117
Class 1A
t t0 = T0
Class 1B Parallel
1.0
Class 1C
t'
t
T
- Orthogonal thickness at
t'
0.5
Sim
i la
t / t0
2
ass
Cl
dip
- Axial Planar thickness at dip
0.0
0
Class 3
30
60
118
90
1A
strongly convergent
isogons
Class 2, Similar
1B, Parallel
1C
isogons perpendicular
to layering
weakly convergent
isogons
Class 3
-dip isogon
parallel isogons,
curvature of two
surfaces same
diverging isogons,
curvature of outer arc
> inner arc
-dip isogon
119
120
kink band
kink plane
Kink axis
axial
planes
Kink axis
T1 t1
t2
T2
T1 t1
t2
T2
axial
planes
Kink folds are peculiar in the sense that the folds are both similar and parallel. If
the two limbs have different thickness, then 1 2 but individual limbs still have the
geometry of both parallel and similar folds. There is a region near the hinge where
orthogonal thickness cannot be defined.
There is only one set of sub-parallel kink planes in monoclinal kink bands. However,
kink bands may occur in two differently oriented sets producing conjugate kink bands. In
other words, two sets of kink bands may be inclined towards each other. When two
kink planes meet they annihilate each other and only one kink plane extends from the
kink junction axis (Fig. 12.11). This property can be used to construct cross section in
areas where kinking is the preferred mode of deformation.
121
(a)
(c)
Fracture
gap
(b)
gap
(d)
122
13.1. Assumptions
For the purpose of kinematic modelling of fault-related folds several reasonable
assumptions (or boundary conditions) must be made. This is a legitimate exercise for
any kind of modelling.
Fault shape: Faults are taken to have sharp bends leading to ideal stair-case
trajectory although fault bends may not be as sharp as bends in ideal stair-case
trajectories. Flat-ramp trajectories of thrust faults have approximately stair-case
geometry. The fault bend controls the location and initiation of axial surfaces of
fault-related folds.
Fold shape: Folds are assumed to have kink fold geometry. Straight limbs and
sharp hinges with infinite curvature of kink folds make the model calculations
easier and simple. This is not a bad assumption because the folds in deformed
sedimentary terrains usually have straighter limbs and hinges of small areal
extent that approximate kink-fold geometry. The assumption of kink fold
geometry does not introduce large error so long as axial surfaces and dip panels
can be unambiguously determined.
Layer thickness: Layer thickness, bed length and cross sectional area are assumed
to remain constant during folding. In some models thickness of limbs are
allowed to change during folding.
Deformation: Plane strain is assumed, i.e., the material points are not allowed to
move in and out of section plane. Deformation is essentially accomplished by
slip parallel to bedding with or without simple shear perpendicular to bedding.
123
dextrally
sheared vein
sinistrally
sheared vein
Axial
surface
(a)
(b)
Any pre-existing vein will be displaced on the limbs and shear strain will be
positive and negative in adjacent limbs (Fig. 13.2b). Further, sense of shear can be used
to locate the hinge of the fold. The location and orientation of axial surfaces in faultrelated folds are controlled by bends on the fault surface (Fig. 13.3). Sense of shear
displacement will be same on both the limbs and material points can move past axial
surfaces. Any pre-existing vein will show same sense shear displacement everywhere
(Fig. 13.3c). Ramp portions will always have shear but the flat portions may or may not
124
have shear strain. In either case, if the layers across the axial surface maintain constant
layer thickness, the axial plane must bisect the interlimb angle.
post-deformation
position
pre-deformation
position
material point
'
(a)
(b)
sinistrally
sheared vein
(c)
Figure 13.3. Flexural-slip during fault-related folding. The material
points can roll through axial surfaces (a, b). (a) Shear strain is set up on
the ramp part although there is shear on the flat part. (b) Shear strain in
the ramp part is different from shear strain on the flat part. (c) Sense of
shear displacements on the two limbs of the kink fold is same, as given
by sheared veins.
125
lower bend Y and two axial planes A and A form at the upper bend X. With continued
slip, the axial plane B climbs up the ramp and axial plane A moves along the upper
flat. The material points roll through axial planes A and B. The axial planes A and B
do not move. Since the footwall is fixed and only hangingwall moves, we can say that
axial planes A and B are attached to the footwall and axial planes A and B are
attached to the hangingwall. As the axial planes B climbs up the ramp, the fold
amplitude increases but the width of the flat crest is reduced. The width of the two
kink bands AA and BB also increases with increasing slip. When Y reaches X (upper
bend), the axial plane B gets attached to the footwall and stops moving. At the same
instant, the axial plane A is transferred to the hangingwall and starts moving along the
upper flat. The ramp anticline stops growing in amplitude but width of the flat crest
keeps increasing with continued slip.
Transport
direction
trailing
anticline
trailing
syncline
trailing
edge
leading
anticline
ramp
anticline
backlimb
forelimb
leading
syncline
leading
edge
126
sin 2
= = tan 1
2
1 + 2 cos
(13.1)
(13.2)
(13.3)
B' B
X
X'
Y' Y
B'
A'
X'
Y'
Y
B'
A'
Y'
127
problem. For example, for = maximum cut-off angle cannot be greater than about
30. This suggests that initial dip of most thrust faults should be 30 or less. Another
interesting point to note is that for an "anticlinal" bend in the fault, is a double-valued
function of and . Folds with larger and smaller values of are called first-mode
(Mode-I) (Fig. 13.7a) and second-mode (Mode-II) (Fig. 13.7b) folds, respectively. If the
angular parameters of a fault-related fold are not related to each other through eqs.
13.113.3, then it is either not an FBF or assumptions for kinematic modelling are
invalid.
5
3
30
90
75 0
90 0
30 0
60 0
=90 0
Anticline
00
60 0
45 0
90 0
15 0
30 0
60 0
=
14 0 0
75 0
50
45 0
75 0
5 0 65 0
5
15
15
Axial angle,
4
5
25
30 0
60 0
15
50
50
1
=
10 0
0
45
25
12 0
0
35
75 0
65 0 55
Mo
d
e
Mo - I
d eII
= 5 0
85 0
90 0
60
30
50
Syncline
- 60
- 30
00
- 900
b
Mode-I fault-bend fold (larger axial angle)
128
(13.4)
= * + (/2)
(13.5)
= 180 - (2* + )
(13.56)
It follows that for a given , the geometry (i.e., interlimb angle and limb dip) of the
nascent fold is maintained throughout its history. In foreland fold-thrust belts,
usually varies between 15-30; the corresponding values for * and are 21.6-38.8
and 58.1 (overturned)-72.4 respectively. Therefore, in an ideal model, the faultpropagation folds are usually asymmetric and tight with steep to overturned forelimb.
The ramp anticline is sharp-hinged with only one axial plane (AB', Fig. 13.8), up to the
plane that locates the fault tip, i.e., the contact between faulted and unfaulted layers.
Beyond this plane the axial surface bifurcates (axial planes A and B) and the anticline
is flat crested. The axial planes of the leading and trailing synclines terminate at the
fault tip and at the fault bend, respectively. As the fault tip climbs up through the
section with increasing slip, the axial plane AB grows in length as the width of the flat
crest decreases.
129
A
A
A'
B'
B'
A'
B
AB'
AB'
fault tip
slip
B'
A'
unfaulted layer
AB'
faulted layer
slip
(a)
Decollement breakthrough
slip
(b)
Anticlinal breakthrough
slip
(c)
Synclinal breakthrough
Figure 13.9. Examples of breakthrough structures associated with faultpropagation folding (after Suppe and Medwedeff 1990)
130
Multi-bend fault-bend folding: If a thrust has sufficiently large slip, the beds may
slip past more than one bend in the fault producing "multi-bend fault-bend"
folds (Suppe 1983; Medwedeff and Suppe 1997). Examples of multi-bend faultbend folding with two bends in the ramp portion are shown in Fig. 13.10.
Medwedeff and Suppe (1997) show that multiple fault bends give rise to
complex fold shapes by a combination of two processes: a process of kink-band
interference, and a set of processes associated with the generation of new dip
panels and axial surfaces as hangingwall cut-offs are displaced past successive
fault bends in the footwall. In theory, curved faults can be approximated by an
arbitrary number of straight segments. In practice, a small number of straight
segments generate a high degree of complexity and adequately models fold
geometry. Consequently, a curved ramp can be modeled as a quasi-curved
ramp. Also multi-segment ramps lead to proliferation of non-parallel axial
surfaces that produce quasi-curved fold shapes.
Bend 3
Bend 3
Bend 2
Bend 2
Bend 1
Bend 1
Simple shear in the faulted layers: In the ideal models of fault-related folding there
is no layer-parallel simple shear within the hangingwall block. Consequently,
the beds do not undergo layer-parallel shear until they enter the fault-bend fold
and the fault surface is always the "active slip surface". If this condition is
relaxed, i.e., if layer-parallel simple shear within the thrust sheet is allowed,
then the fold shape can be modified in many different ways. The ideal
theoretical shape of a fault-bend fold associated with a simple step in
dcollement is a flat-crested anticline (Fig. 13.5). Suppe (1983) shows that if the
thrust sheet undergoes pervasive layer parallel simple shear, the two axial
surfaces of the flat-crested anticline progressively annihilate each other forming
131
Ac
tiv
Ac
tiv
es
lip
su r
fa c
e
es
lip
su r
fa c
e
Combined fault-propagation and fault-bend folding: In the model of faultpropagation folding, the folding initiates as soon as the ramp begins to step up
from the dcollement (Fig. 13.12). The fold acquires its basic geometry at this
stage and continues to grow self similarly with the propagation of the fault.
Also all the beds in the hangingwall cut by the fault are folded through the
anticlinal axial surface. Chester and Chester (1990) made an interesting
modification to this model wherein they suggest the existence of a pre-existing
ramp (or fracture) (Fig. 13.12). Folding is initiated when the pre-existing ramp is
activated without any change in dip. In a way, it is similar to fault-bend folding
where fracture forms first followed by folding. The difference is that in Chester
and Chester's (1990) model there is no upper flat and the ramp continues to
propagate without change in orientation. The fold above the fault tip is a faultpropagation fold whereas the fold at the ramp-flat intersection is a fault-bend
fold. These two folds are separated by an unfolded region. Another important
132
geometric difference is that in this model some of the lower layers in the
hangingwall cut by the fault are not folded through the anticlinal axial surface.
fault tip
b
fault/fold initiation point
Fault-propagation fold
No deformation
Fault-bend fold
slip
residual
Forelimb thickening leads to larger interlimb angle and smaller forelimb dip than
the predicted values. For a given value of , forelimb thinning leads to folds with
smaller interlimb angle and larger forelimb dip but forelimb thickening leads to folds
with larger interlimb angle and smaller forelimb dip. The thickening/thinning occurs
only in the forelimb, the thickness remains constant in the remainder part of the beds.
133
Also, the basic geometry of the fold is acquired at the time of inception. However, the
shape of a fold-propagation fold can be modified in the case of a dcollement
breakthrough; the part of the fold that retains the original geometry is called the
residual. Jamison (1987) also demonstrated that simple shear parallel to the thrust sheet
thins the forelimb and reduces the interlimb angle and thus changes the fold shape. In
their detailed modelling of fault-propagation folding, Suppe and Medwedeff (1990)
developed a theory, called the "fixed front anticlinal axial surface" theory, in which
forelimb thinning/thickening was considered as a possible variable.
Lift-up fold
Box fold
slip
slip
(a)
(b)
Footwall syncline
Footwall syncline +
breakthrough
slip
(c)
fault tip
slip
(d)
134
with these folds that can leave a syncline, called footwall syncline (McNaught and Mitra
1993) stranded in the footwall (Fig. 5.12a,b).
135
Active axial
surface
(a)
Inactive axial
surface
(c)
Coulomb failure
surface
0
70
(b)
Void
(d)
Active axial
surface
Inactive axial
surface
(e)
Growth wedge
Zone of most
recent deformation
Growth axial surface
(c)
(b)
Active axial
surface
Pre-growth
strata
Growth
strata
(a)
Inactive axial
surface
136
137
138
Woodward (1988), Woodward et al (1989), Mitra and Namson (1989), Mitra (1992) and
others.
(a)
(b)
SW
FT
an st
So thru
r
hi
pu
uk
pi
m
o
a
l
ag t
wa st
er s
D thru Ja thru
r
ro st
Pathru
r
pu
a m st
l
BT NE
M
Pathru
20 km
Siwalik
Subathu-Dharmsala
Metamorphic basement
Figure 14.2. A schematic yet reasonable cross section across Himalayan foldthrust belt, Kangra area, Himachal Pradesh (Ranga Rao 1989, unpublished
ONGC report, in Biswas 1994). Although the section is not balanced, the
interpretation follows structural styles in fold-thrust belts.
There are only a limited suite of structures that can exist in a specific geological
environment. The foothills family of structures in the Canadian foothills
139
comprise of concentric folds, dcollement, thrusts (usually low angle and often
folded), tear faults, and late normal faults.
Elliot (1983) gave a more restrictive definition of a balanced cross section:
The structures drawn on a section should be those that can be seen in the field
in outcrops, cliffs, mountain sides etc.
There are areas where exposures are scanty owing to heavy vegetations, such as
Himalayan foreland belt. In such areas it may not be possible to decide admissible
structures as suggested by Elliot (1983). Therefore, a preferred definition is:
Construction of a valid structural cross section, which depicts the present day subsurface structural geometry. This is the so-called deformed-state cross section,
which geologists have been constructing through ages. The key issue here is
that the section we construct must contain the geometry of structures we
actually see in the field or the geometry of structures present in other areas with
similar tectonic setup. For example, if we are to construct a cross section across
a rift basin, the section must dominantly contain normal faults and associated
140
structures. Or, if our section is across a fold-thrust belt, the main structural
architecture must be controlled by thrusts and associated structures. This
exercise results in admissible deformed-state cross section.
The deformed-state cross section should be restored to undeformed state (i.e., validated).
Cross sections are essentially interpretations based on incomplete data and
require extrapolation and interpolation. So, how do we increase confidence in
our interpretation? Simply put, we validate. If we cannot validate a cross
section, we reject the interpretation. We then reinterpret the available data and
construct a new section and try to validate. A balanced cross section is the one,
which can be validated. We know that sediments are commonly deposited with
(sub-) horizontal layering. If we undeform (i.e., restore or retrodeform) an
admissible cross section drawn across a deformed sedimentary basin and find
that the layers become horizontal then we have validated our cross section.
We have not said anything about a balanced cross section being a correct
interpretation. Balancing a cross section is akin to inverse modelling. Like all inverse
modelling, the solution we arrive at is non-unique. It is possible to construct more than
one balanced sections with the same data set. Therefore, it is important to remember that
balancing is a necessary but not a sufficient criterion for a correct structural interpretation.
Balancing even a mildly complex structural section is a time consuming, tedious and
frustrating exercise without any guarantee of success within the fixed timeframe of a
project. However, while non-balanced and schematic sections are almost always
wrong, a balanced cross section is probably correct! However, practicing the techniques
of cross-section balancing, particularly in deformed sedimentary basins, should lead to
better and more reliable cross sections, even if a section cannot be rigorously balanced.
14.4 Examples
A few examples will illustrate the requirements for balanced cross section. The
hypothetical deformed-state cross section in Fig. 14.3a seems to be quite reasonable
with thrusts and related ramp anticlines. The steeply dipping parts of the thrusts may
141
Deformed
(a)
Restored
(b)
Figure 14.3. The hypothetical cross section in (a) is unacceptable because the
restored section is not admissible.
Deformed
(a)
Restored
(b)
Figure 14.4. The hypothetical section in (a) is a balanced cross section because
both the deformed-state section and restored sections are admissible.
142
Main Frontal
Thrust (MFT)
Mohand anticline
Santaurgarh Thrust
Santaurgarh anticline
Main Boundary Thrust (MBT)
Topography
Doon Gravel
P Alluvium
L
?
Doon Gravels/
Alluvium
Up. Siwalik Fm
Mid. Siwalik Fm
Lr. Siwalik Fm
Dharmsala Gr
(a)
Detachment
Subathu Gr
P
MFT
(b)
5 km
Figure 14.5. Balanced (a) and restored (b) cross sections across Himalayan
foreland fold-thrust-belt, Dehra Dun area (after Mishra and Mukhopadhyay
2002).
Deformed-state cross section: Any structural cross section showing the presentday sub-surface structural geometry.
Restored cross section: A cross section that has been 'pulled apart' in the sense
that displacements on faults have been removed and folded beds have been
straightened.
Admissible restored section: It is a restored section in which the restored beds are
horizontal and the restored fault trajectories are admissible. In particular, ramp
dips should not be more than 30-35 and thrust trajectories should not have zigzag shape unless they are out-of-sequence thrusts.
143
Balanced cross section: A deformed-state cross section that is both admissible and
viable. Therefore, a balanced cross section has been restored to undeformed
state and has been tested for viability.
Narrow and elongated basins and occur at the margin of orogenic belts.
Hinterland
Foreland
NE
SW
(a)
Basement
20 km
Regional detachment
Hinterland
Foreland
SE
NW
mean sea level
20 km
semen
crystalline ba
Pr ecambrian
Basal detachment
(b)
Figure 14.6. Cross sections across foothills of (a) Canadian Rockies (after Price
1981) and (b) NW Himalayas (after Mukhopadhyay and Mishra 1999) showing
essential feature of thin-skinned tectonics where cover sequences are deformed
but basement remain largely unaffected.
144
Axial and fault traces are parallel to each other and parallel to the trend of the
orogenic belt.
High Himalaya sedimentary Zone
High Himalaya Crystalline Zone
Lesser Himalaya Zone
Sub-Himalaya Zone
ITSZ: Indus Tsangpo Suture Zone
STDS: South Tibet detachment Sysytem
MCT: Main central Thrust
MBT: Main Boundary Thrust
MFT: Main Frontal Thrust
N
TR
AN
H
EX
FO
RE
30
TE
LA
N
RN
A
IN
E
R
LA
HI M
N
E
Delhi
Te
tr a cto n
nsp ic
ort
MB
T
250 km
0
80
ALA
YA
ITSZ
MC
T
AL L U
STDS
VIA L
MF
T
PLAIN
900
The frontal part of the Himalayas shows all the characters of a fold-thrust belt. The
Sub-Himalaya Zone consisting of Tertiary sedimentary rock sequence and the
Precambrian sedimentary and very low-grade metamorphic rocks of the Lesser
Himalaya Zone together constitute the Himalayan FTB (Fig. 14.7).
14.6 Applicability
The concepts and techniques of balancing cross sections originated in foreland foldthrust belts, and in particular in the frontal fold-thrust belt of the eastern Canadian
Rocky Mountains, which are characterized by folded and faulted, non-metamorphosed
sedimentary sequences that lie above a gently hinterland-dipping detachment or
145
SW
NE
Km
Isiboro
anticline
Late Paleogene-Neogene
Jurassic-Cretaceous
Up. Carb.-Lr. perm.
Carboniferous
Dev.-Sil.-Ord.
Cambrian-Precambrian
-5
(a)
10 km
Km
Oil window
Oil & Gas Zone
Gas window
-5
(b)
146
147
148
Slight curvature near the bend can be ignored without adding significant error.
Curved faults can be considered to have multiple bends with straight line
trajectories in between bends.
Thrust tip
Thrust
Axial traces
Direction of
tectonic transport
Direction of
tectonic transport
(a)
(b)
Depth to Detachment: When we construct deformed-state cross section in foldthrust belts, what we essentially try to do is fill up the space between the
topographic surface and the basal detachment! So it is important to know the
depth and dip of this basal detachment. It may be known from seismic
reflection profiles or borehole litholog data. In the absence of such data, a
commonly used method is depth-to-detachment calculation, which assumes
area conservation during deformation. The method of depth-to-detachment
calculation is illustrated in Fig. 15.2.
2'
3'
S = lo - l
Area A
1'
4'
5'
Area B
d
Shortening, S = lo - l
Area A = Area B = d x S
d = area A/S
149
Reference lines: There are two types of reference lines, viz., pin line and loose line
(Fig. 15.3). A pin line is a line in the deformed-state cross section from which all
restoration measurements are made. Pin lines can be regional or local. Regional
pin lines are perpendicular to stratification and are located in the undeformed
foreland. Local pin lines are located within the thrust belt. Loose lines are usually
marked near the trailing edge of the cross section. A loose line can be
considered to be chain of marker points in the layered sequence. It is
particularly useful in tracking layer-parallel simple shear, which may not be
obvious in deformed-state cross section.
Foreland
Regional
pin line
Loose line
150
Previous sections: Do not throw away previous sections, if available. Modify such
sections after proper evaluation in terms of admissibility and viability. One can
avoid repeating the same mistake made by previous workers. Of course if there
is no previous section available one has to start from scratch with raw data.
Data: All available data should be gathered and compiled, such as surface
geological map, stratigraphy, regional geology and tectonic setting, dip data
collected at the surface, dipmeter data from borehole logs, lithologs, seismic
reflection profiles etc. Obviously more data we have more confidence we will
have in our cross section. Subsurface data, such as, seismic reflection profiles,
are not absolutely essential, for balancing a cross section, which can be done from
geological map and surface dip data alone. Of course, for an offshore project or
if the area is covered by alluvium the first data is commonly seismic reflection
profile. It should be remember that even with today's improved data acquisition
and processing techniques, seismic data often leave much to be desired.
151
Busking
The Busk method (Fig. 15.4) allows us to construct the traces of bedding planes in a
section plane from surface or subsurface measurements of the attitudes of the folded
layers. The geometric basis of this method is the assumption that the folded layers are
everywhere tangent to circular arcs. A consequence of this assumption is that the trace
of each folded layer in a profile can be divided into a number of segments each of
which is either a portion of a circular arc or straight line. Along each circular arc
segment, the dip changes smoothly and continuously. Adjacent circular arcs are
connected by inflexion points or by straight-line segments.
Lines perpendicular to dips are drawn from the position of dip measurement data.
The perpendicular lines from two adjacent dip data intersect at a point that represents a
radius for a curvature of an arc, which is utilized to project the beds between the two
data points. The method is described in Fig. 15.4. For example, in Fig. 15.4 two dip data
152
(1,2) are shown at two locations (A, B). We draw perpendicular (C, D) to dips 1 and 2,
the perpendiculars intersect at O. We then draw to circular segments with OA and OB
as radii. This gives us the fold segment between C and D. One of the problem of
Busking is that, singularities (points of infinite curvature) often appear in Busk
construction of folds. Singularities are rarely observed in natural concentric parallel
folds.
L
I
G
B
A
D
D
E
Kinking
Kink or constant dip-domain method (Fig. 15.5) has proven to be extremely useful for
extrapolating data to depth. Many fold-thrust belts contain folds, which display a kink
or dip-domain geometry. Therefore this method has become very popular for
constructing cross sections in such belts.
Angular
folds
produce
domainal
dip
patterns on maps. A dip domain is an area in which strata have nearly constant dip or
dip varies within a small range. Adjacent dip domains are separated by narrow zones,
representing hinge zones, in which dips change rapidly.
In kink methods we use two inherent geometric features of kink folds to extrapolate
surface data to depth: if layers do not change thickness, the axial plane bisects interlimb
angle and only one axial plane extends from the junction where two axial planes meet.
The kink-method of section construction is rather straightforward and the technique is
explained in Fig. 15.5. First we locate boundaries between dip domains (Fig. 15. a) and
draw the axial planes with orientation that bisects the angle given by the dips in two
adjacent dip domains (Fig. 15.5b). Where two axial surfaces meet, a new axial plane
153
starts bisecting the angle between two intersecting axial planes. Within the area
between two axial planes, straight beds are drawn. Round-hinged folds can be
approximated as closely-spaced small kinks (Fig. 15.6).
Domain Boundary
Ground
surface
(a)
Dip
Domain Boundary
(Axial Surface)
Branch
point
Dip Domain X
(b)
Dip Domain Y
(c)
154
Wherever two axial surfaces meet, a new axial surface emerges whose orientation is
given by the bisector of the two axial planes. The beds are then extended using the dip
domain data and the fold is constructed.
30 o
0o
40 o
60 o
Domain 5
Domain 4
Solution
Domain 3
Domain 2
Domain 1
Data
0o
70 o
75 o
Well
40 o
A B
60 o
Sandstone A
Sandstone A
Shale A
Shale A
Sandstone B
Sandstone B
Shale B
Shale B
Sandstone C
Sandstone C
Shale C
Shale C
75 o
Sandstone D
60
Sandstone D
Figure 15.7. Extrapolation of surface data to depth using kink method to deduce
the geometry of the large fold.
Maximum
ramp height
Data
Maximum depth
of fault
155
Fig. 15.8 shows an exercise of how surface dip data and known stratigraphy are
used to deduce buried thrust. The dip data show five dip domains, three horizontal dip
domains are separated by two dip domains where dips are steeper. Overall the fold
geometry is that of a flat-crested anticline, so we guess that it is a fault-bend fold. If this
is the case there has to be a thrust at depth. Let us suppose we know that the tectonic
transport direction is towards left. Note that the axial angle () is known and back limb
dip can be used to infer ramp dip or cut-off angle (). With available information we
cannot deduce the exact location of the fault. However, we can find range of possible
solutions. Solution 1 is based on maximum possible depth of the fault and solution 2
gives us maximum ramp height. We recognize that an exact solution is not possible in
this example but the range of possible solution can be useful for planning further
exploration strategies.
The examples shown in Figs. 15.7 and 15.8 are hypothetical. A real-life example of
section construction with limited data is shown in Fig. 15.9 (Suppe 1983). Fig. 15.9a
shows the available data near the crest of the Hokou-Yangmei anticline, Taiwan FTB.
The Well A encountered a double thickness of the distinctive Pliocene Chinsui Shale
and normal thickness of formations below Chinsui Shale, suggesting that the small fold
on which Well A sits does not extend below Chinsui Shale. Two guesses were made, as
shown in Fig. 15.9b, both involving a simple step of a thrust fault from one dcollement
to another in the Chinsui Shale. In solution 1, a thrust steps up to the north and in
solution 2 a thrust steps up to the south. The important angular observations are that
the dip at the base of the Chinsui Shale is 5 whereas the minimum dip of the Chinsui
Shale, between two wells is 32. Therefore, we choose 32 - 5 = 27 as = in solution
1 and in solution 2. Using Suppe's (1983) equations (or graph) we obtain
= 34 for
solution 1 with 34 - 5 = 29 as the predicted surface dip. This predicted dip is much
greater than the observed surface dip of about 16, so discard this solution was
discarded. For solution 2 we obtain = = 22 and 22 - 5 = 17 as the predicted
surface dip, in good agreement with the observation. Therefore solution 2 may be
considered viable. We can now compute how the shallow fault in solution 2 will be
folded by the deeper anticline ( = 58). The cross-cutting fault block is in the footwall,
156
convex towards the fault; therefore it is a "syncline" and = 57 and = 15, which are
in reasonable agreement with surface dips. The final interpretation of the structural
geometry using solution 2 is shown in Fig. 15.9c. In this example, a hypothesis was
invoked (fault-bending over a simple step up of dcollement) and tested against the
available data and a solution was found.
Well
B
North
South
dip = 320
Chinsui shale
dip = 50
Thickness
doubled
-1
Km
-2
-3
(a)
Data
16 0
16 0
=?
0
(34 )
= 0
= 22
32
= 0 0
= 32 05
= 27
(b)
= 270
= 0?
(57 )
=?
(15 0)
Solution1
(rejected)
= 58
(c)
Final interpretation
based on solution 2
Solution 2
(accepted)
Figure 15.9. Actual example of quantitative section construction, HokouYangmei anticline, Taiwan (Suppe 1983). With available data (a), two solutions
are guessed (b). Solution 1 leads to conflict with surface dip data. Solution 2 is
in conformity with surface dip data. (c) Final interpretation based on solution 2.
A different approach is illustrated in Fig. 15.10, where the trajectory of Main Frontal
Thrust (MFT) and the geometry of the Mohand anticline, Dehra Dun re-entrant have
been constrained (Mishra and Mukhopadhyay 2002). The available data are shown in
Figs. 15.10a,b; the MFT trajectory and the basal detachment were approximately
constrained from published ONGC seismic reflection profile and well data. Several
forward models were made, three of which are shown in Figs. 15.10c-e. A model based
on multi-bend fault-bend folding with 12% forelimb thinning and uniformly tapering
157
layers conforms to the surface dip data and interpreted litholog and "best" explains the
geometry of the Mohand anticline (Fig. 10e).
The above examples show that it is possible to construct quantifiable structural
cross sections.
N
Dun
Gravels
Alluvium
20
Mid. Siwalik
Up. Siwalik
Dun Gravels
Well
MhA
15
22
30
11
30
MFT
33
Topography
MFT and Basal detachment
Approximated from
subsurface data
MhA
5 km
23
36
MFT?
IU M
AL LUV
(a)
5 km
(c)
(b)
5 km
(d)
5 km
Topography
12% forelimb
thinning
sli p
4.0 km
(e)
5 km
Doon Gravels
Up. Siwalik
Mid. Siwalik
Lr. Siwalik
Dharmsala
158
159
160
additional benefits: (1) it helps us understand how a fold-thrust belt evolves through
space and relative time, and (2) burial and uplift history can be worked out that may be
useful in understanding source-rock maturation and hydrocarbon migration and
accumulation.
The iterative process involved in restoring a section to its undeformed state and
then changing the original section if it does not restore can be tedious, frustrating and
very time consuming. Therefore, it is important to spend the maximum time and effort
to correctly construct the first section using forward-modelled structural geometry.
This is because even minor changes in one part of the section will invariably result in
changing the remainder of the section. The ultimate objective is to construct a
geometrically reasonable cross section within a limited amount of time.
There are two methods of restoration: equal line-length restoration (also called
sinuous bed method) and equal-area restoration. The methods are briefly discussed
below.
161
segments. The ends of these straight-line segments then define the footwall trajectory of
the second fault. This procedure is repeated successively for all the faults.
Fig. 16.1 shows a fault-bend fold. For the purpose of restoration two reference lines
are chosen. The pin line and the loose lines are located in the leading and trailing
edges, respectively. Point A was at the upper bend (A') before deformation, so A is
pulled back to this point. In so doing, we also pull back the entire rock package as well
as the reference lines. Now keeping the pin line fixed, we straighten all the lines
keeping the length of the lines constant. In Fig. 16.2, there are two faults in the
deformed section; fault 1 is younger and fault 2 is older. We first restore fault 1 and
then restore fault 2 following the same procedure as in Fig. 16.1. Note that the dip of
fault 2 has changed in restored section. One surprise is that we find significant layerparallel simple shear in the restored section that is not obvious in the deformed-state
section.
Deformed
Loose line
3
1
Restored
Pin line
1'
2'
3'
4'
5'
6'
A'
Figure 16.1. The line-length method of section restoration involving one fault.
Deformed
Restored
Pin line
Loose line
L2
L1
Shear
2
2
1
1
L1
L2
2
3
1
1
Figure 16.2. The line-length method of section restoration involving two faults.
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must be the result of plane strain within the cross sectional plane in order for the area
balancing to be valid. The changes in bedding thickness must not be result of material
moving in and out the plane of section during deformation. Under this condition, if
there has been no overall volume change then the cross-sectional area of any rock unit
shown in the deformed-state cross section has not changed during deformation.
However, line-lengths (e.g., distances between given thrust faults as measured along
specific bedding planes) may have changed. In such a situation, areas of rocks and not
line lengths are measured for the purpose of restoration.
3
4
2
1
A = 3.2 sq. km
X'
1'
2'
3'
4'
Y'
A = 2.0 sq. km
A = 3.2 sq. km
163
A2
A1
L2k
L1k
Y'
(a)
W'
Deformed section
Z'
Y
X
A2
A1
L2a
L1a
(b)
W
Area restoration
X
Z
L1k
Y*
L2k
A1
A2
L2a
L1a
(c)
Ld
L2
Z*
L1
This method is illustrated in Fig. 16.4. The deformed-state section is shown in Fig.
16.4a. Equal-area restoration (Fig. 16.4b) results in two parallelogram shaped restored
thrust sheets. The orientation of the thrust YZ and the right-side reference line can be
varied considerably maintaining a constant area, as shown by dashed lines. The equalarea restoration method can be improved by combining it with key-bed method of
164
restoring individual bed lengths. The key-bed method identifies a thin competent key
unit that undergoes minimum penetrative deformation and area change so that it can
be restored using line-length method. The top layer is assumed to be key bed whose
length remained unchanged. Fig. 16.3c shows combined key-bed and equal-area
restoration. Note the back shear in restored diagram which is not obvious in the
deformed section.
165
References
Suggested reading
The following textbooks have influenced my thinking on structural geology over the
years. They always have pride of place on my desk. One should not be surprised if
treatment of any of the topics here is similar to that in any of these books.
Davis, G. H. (1984). Structural geology of rocks and regions. John Wiley & Sons, New
York.
Hobbs, B. E., Means, W. D. and Williams, P. F. (1976). An outline of structural
geology. John Wiley & Sons, New York.
Means, W. D. (1976). Stress and strain. Springer-Verlag, New York.
Ramsay, J. G. (1967). Folding and fracturing of rocks. McGraw-Hill, New York.
Ramsay, J. G. and Huber, M. I. (1983). The techniques of modern structural geology.
Vol. 1: Strain analysis. Academic Press, London.
Ramsay, J. G. and Huber, M. I. (1987). The techniques of modern structural geology.
Vol. 2: Folds and fractures. Academic Press, London.
Suppe, J. (1985). Principles of structural geology. Printice-Hall, New jersey.
Twiss, R. J. and Moores, E. M. (1992). Structural geology. W. H. Freeman and Co.,
New York
References cited
Anderson, E. M. (1951). The dynamics of faulting. Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh, 206 pp.
Baby, P., Moretti, I., Guillier, B., Limachi, R., Mendez, E., Oller, J. and Specht, M.
(1995). Petroleum system of the northern and central Bolivian sub-Andean zone. In:
Petroleum Basins of South America (A. J. Tankard, R. Suarez S. and H. J. Welsink,
eds.), American Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir., 62, 445-458.
Biswas, S. K. (1994). Status of exploration for hydrocarbons in Siwalik basin of India
and future trends. Him. Geol., 15, 283-300.
Boyer, S .E. and Elliot, D. (1982). Thrust Systems. American Association of Petroleum
Geologists Bulletin, 66, 1196-1230.
Chester, J. S. and Chester, F. M. (1990). Fault-propagation folds above thrusts with
constant dip. Journal of Structural Geology, 12, 903-910.
Cloos, E. (1955). Experimental analysis of fracture patterns. Geological Society of
America Bulletin, 66: 241-256.
Cloos, E. (1968). Experimental analysis of Gulf Coast fracture patterns. American
Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, 52: 420-444.
Dahlstrom, C. D. A. (1969). Balanced cross sections. Canadian Journal of Earth
sciences, 6:743-757.
166
167