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Title: Structural styles of the Guess Creek fault block beneath the Great Smoky thrust sheet, Blount County, Tennessee

Conference · · Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs; (United States)
OSTI ID:5951563
; ;  [1];  [2]
  1. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN (United States). Dept. of Geological Sciences
  2. Oak Ridge National Lab., TN (United States)

A road cut along US 321 N, approximately 1 km NW of Walland, TN, exposes a previously unexposed complexly deformed section of Middle Ordovician clastic wedge [Chickamauga Group, Sevier Shale] sedimentary rocks. It provides an excellent opportunity to analyze both the lithologic assemblages and complex folding and faulting beneath the Great Smoky thrust sheet. Arkosic quartzite of the Lower Cambrian Cochran Conglomerate [Chilhowee Group], has been thrust over weaker Sevier Shale in the hanging wall of the Guess Creek fault. Regionally, the Great Smoky fault separates metamorphosed Precambrian to Lower Cambrian clastic shelf, slope, and rift facies rocks of the western Blue Ridge from Cambro-Ordovician carbonate shelf and orogenic wedge deposits of the foreland fold and thrust belt. West of the Great Smoky fault, the Guess Creek fault has been interpreted to floor duplexed Cambro-Ordovician rocks exposed in windows beneath the Great Smoky thrust sheet in the vicinity of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The Sevier Shale here consists of variably cleaved shale, siltstone, sandstone, and conglomerate. It exhibits a variety of fold styles throughout the exposure, ranging from predominantly noncylindrical tight folds to broad, open structures. A weak axial-planar pencil cleavage is developed in the Middle Ordovician shale and siltstone, along with a secondary cleavage that transects the axial surfaces of the folds. Minor thrust faults within the Sevier Shale appear to have formed by propagation through tightened fold hinges or bedding-parallel slip. The fold pattern observed in the roadcut appears to be partly the result of movement along a tear fault that broke both the hanging wall and footwall of the Great Smoky thrust sheet after emplacement. Slickenline orientations along minor thrust surfaces in the Cochran Conglomerate indicate eastward-directed, oblique-slip movement of the tear fault.

OSTI ID:
5951563
Report Number(s):
CONF-9304188-; CODEN: GAAPBC
Journal Information:
Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs; (United States), Vol. 25:4; Conference: 42. annual Geological Society of America (GSA) Southeastern Section meeting, Tallahassee, FL (United States), 1-2 Apr 1993; ISSN 0016-7592
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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