2021
DOI: 10.1130/ges02267.1
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Development of an intra-carbonate detachment during thrusting: The variable influence of pressure solution on deformation style, Khao Khwang Fold and Thrust Belt, Thailand

Abstract: Classic detachment zones in fold and thrust belts are generally defined by a weak lithology (typically salt or shale), often accompanied by high over-pressures. This study describes an atypical detachment that occurs entirely within a relatively strong Permian carbonate lithology, deformed during the Triassic Indosinian orogeny in Thailand under late diagenetic-anchimetamorphic conditions. The key differences between stratigraphic members that led to development of a detachment zone are bedding spacing and cla… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…It is likely that DVC is most developed close to the surface where significant porosity is preserved, and in this respect is similar to lateral compaction that also increases towards the sediment surface (see discussion in Alsop et al 2017a). However, it is also possible for DVC to develop in compacted rocks, with Morley et al (2021) suggesting that variations in vertical shortening marked by anticlines displaying loss of amplitude upwards or synclines dying out downwards, may be accommodated by bed-parallel pressure solution seams in adjacent rocks. The role of DVC across a range of settings and states of lithification may therefore be more significant than hitherto realised.…”
Section: Differential Vertical Compactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is likely that DVC is most developed close to the surface where significant porosity is preserved, and in this respect is similar to lateral compaction that also increases towards the sediment surface (see discussion in Alsop et al 2017a). However, it is also possible for DVC to develop in compacted rocks, with Morley et al (2021) suggesting that variations in vertical shortening marked by anticlines displaying loss of amplitude upwards or synclines dying out downwards, may be accommodated by bed-parallel pressure solution seams in adjacent rocks. The role of DVC across a range of settings and states of lithification may therefore be more significant than hitherto realised.…”
Section: Differential Vertical Compactionmentioning
confidence: 99%