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Fold (geology)

In structural geology, a fold is a stack of originally planar surfaces, such as sedimentary strata, that are bent or curved ("folded") during permanent deformation. Folds in rocks vary in size from microscopic crinkles to mountain-sized folds. They occur as single isolated folds or in periodic sets (known as fold trains). Synsedimentary folds are those formed during sedimentary deposition.

Folds of alternate layers of limestone and chert occur in Greece. The limestone and chert were originally deposited as flat layers on the floor of a deep sea basin. These folds were produced by Alpine deformation.

Folds form under varied conditions of stress, pore pressure, and temperature gradient, as evidenced by their presence in soft sediments, the full spectrum of metamorphic rocks, and even as primary flow structures in some igneous rocks. A set of folds distributed on a regional scale constitutes a fold belt, a common feature of orogenic zones. Folds are commonly formed by shortening of existing layers, but may also be formed as a result of displacement on a non-planar fault (fault bend fold), at the tip of a propagating fault (fault propagation fold), by differential compaction or due to the effects of a high-level igneous intrusion e.g. above a laccolith.

Kink band folds in the Permian of New Mexico, USA
Rainbow Basin syncline in the Barstow Formation near Barstow, California

Fold terminology Edit

 
Fold sketch 3D model

The fold hinge is the line joining points of maximum curvature on a folded surface. This line may be either straight or curved. The term hinge line has also been used for this feature.[1]

A fold surface seen perpendicular to its shortening direction can be divided into hinge and limb portions; the limbs are the flanks of the fold, and the limbs converge at the hinge zone. Within the hinge zone lies the hinge point, which is the point of minimum radius of curvature (maximum curvature) of the fold. The crest of the fold represents the highest point of the fold surface whereas the trough is the lowest point. The inflection point of a fold is the point on a limb at which the concavity reverses; on regular folds, this is the midpoint of the limb.

 
Flank & hinge

The axial surface is defined as a plane connecting all the hinge lines of stacked folded surfaces. If the axial surface is planar, it is called an axial plane and can be described in terms of strike and dip.

Folds can have a fold axis. A fold axis “is the closest approximation to a straight line that when moved parallel to itself, generates the form of the fold.”[2] (Ramsay 1967). A fold that can be generated by a fold axis is called a cylindrical fold. This term has been broadened to include near-cylindrical folds. Often, the fold axis is the same as the hinge line.[3][4]

Descriptive features Edit

Fold size Edit

Minor folds are quite frequently seen in outcrop; major folds seldom are except in the more arid countries. Minor folds can, however, often provide the key to the major folds they are related to. They reflect the same shape and style, the direction in which the closures of the major folds lie, and their cleavage indicates the attitude of the axial planes of the major folds and their direction of overturning [5]

Fold shape Edit

 
Chevron folds, Ireland

A fold can be shaped like a chevron, with planar limbs meeting at an angular axis, as cuspate with curved limbs, as circular with a curved axis, or as elliptical with unequal wavelength.

Fold tightness Edit

 
Interlimb angles

Fold tightness is defined by the size of the angle between the fold's limbs (as measured tangential to the folded surface at the inflection line of each limb), called the interlimb angle. Gentle folds have an interlimb angle of between 180° and 120°, open folds range from 120° to 70°, close folds from 70° to 30°, and tight folds from 30° to 0°.[6] Isoclines, or isoclinal folds, have an interlimb angle of between 10° and zero, with essentially parallel limbs.

Fold symmetry Edit

Not all folds are equal on both sides of the axis of the fold. Those with limbs of relatively equal length are termed symmetrical, and those with highly unequal limbs are asymmetrical. Asymmetrical folds generally have an axis at an angle to the original unfolded surface they formed on.

Facing and vergence Edit

Vergence is calculated in a direction perpendicular to the fold axis.

Deformation style classes Edit

 
Ramsay classification of folds by convergence of dip isogons (red lines).[7]

Folds that maintain uniform layer thickness are classed as concentric folds. Those that do not are called similar folds. Similar folds tend to display thinning of the limbs and thickening of the hinge zone. Concentric folds are caused by warping from active buckling of the layers, whereas similar folds usually form by some form of shear flow where the layers are not mechanically active. Ramsay has proposed a classification scheme for folds that often is used to describe folds in profile based upon the curvature of the inner and outer lines of a fold and the behavior of dip isogons. that is, lines connecting points of equal dip on adjacent folded surfaces:[8]

Ramsay classification scheme for folds
Class Curvature C Comment
 1 Cinner > Couter Dip isogons converge
    1A Orthogonal thickness at hinge narrower than at limbs
    1B Parallel folds
    1C Orthogonal thickness at limbs narrower than at hinge
 2 Cinner = Couter Dip isogons are parallel: similar folds
 3 Cinner < Couter Dip isogons diverge

Types of fold Edit

 
An anticline in New Jersey
 
A monocline at Colorado National Monument
 
Recumbent fold, King Oscar Fjord

Linear Edit

  • Anticline: linear, strata normally dip away from the axial center, oldest strata in center irrespective of orientation.
  • Syncline: linear, strata normally dip toward the axial center, youngest strata in center irrespective of orientation.
  • Antiform: linear, strata dip away from the axial center, age unknown, or inverted.
  • Synform: linear, strata dip toward the axial center, age unknown, or inverted.
  • Monocline: linear, strata dip in one direction between horizontal layers on each side.
  • Recumbent: linear, fold axial plane oriented at a low angle resulting in overturned strata in one limb of the fold.

Other Edit

  • Dome: nonlinear, strata dip away from center in all directions, oldest strata in center.
  • Basin: nonlinear, strata dip toward center in all directions, youngest strata in center.
  • Chevron: angular fold with straight limbs and small hinges
  • Slump: typically monoclinal, the result of differential compaction or dissolution during sedimentation and lithification.
  • Ptygmatic: Folds are chaotic, random and disconnected. Typical of sedimentary slump folding, migmatites and decollement detachment zones.
  • Parasitic: short-wavelength folds formed within a larger wavelength fold structure - normally associated with differences in bed thickness[9]
  • Disharmonic: Folds in adjacent layers with different wavelengths and shapes[9]

(A homocline involves strata dipping in the same direction, though not necessarily any folding.)

Causes of folding Edit

Folds appear on all scales, in all rock types, at all levels in the crust. They arise from a variety of causes.

Layer-parallel shortening Edit

 
Box fold in La Herradura Formation, Morro Solar, Peru

When a sequence of layered rocks is shortened parallel to its layering, this deformation may be accommodated in a number of ways, homogeneous shortening, reverse faulting or folding. The response depends on the thickness of the mechanical layering and the contrast in properties between the layers. If the layering does begin to fold, the fold style is also dependent on these properties. Isolated thick competent layers in a less competent matrix control the folding and typically generate classic rounded buckle folds accommodated by deformation in the matrix. In the case of regular alternations of layers of contrasting properties, such as sandstone-shale sequences, kink-bands, box-folds and chevron folds are normally produced.[10]

 
Rollover anticline
 
Ramp anticline
 
Fault-propagation fold

Fault-related folding Edit

Many folds are directly related to faults, associated with their propagation, displacement and the accommodation of strains between neighboring faults.

Fault bend folding Edit

Fault-bend folds are caused by displacement along a non-planar fault. In non-vertical faults, the hanging-wall deforms to accommodate the mismatch across the fault as displacement progresses. Fault bend folds occur in both extensional and thrust faulting. In extension, listric faults form rollover anticlines in their hanging walls.[11] In thrusting, ramp anticlines form whenever a thrust fault cuts up section from one detachment level to another. Displacement over this higher-angle ramp generates the folding.[12]

Fault propagation folding Edit

Fault propagation folds or tip-line folds are caused when displacement occurs on an existing fault without further propagation. In both reverse and normal faults this leads to folding of the overlying sequence, often in the form of a monocline.[13]

Detachment folding Edit

When a thrust fault continues to displace above a planar detachment without further fault propagation, detachment folds may form, typically of box-fold style. These generally occur above a good detachment such as in the Jura Mountains, where the detachment occurs on middle Triassic evaporites.[14]

Folding in shear zones Edit

 
Dextral sense shear folds in mylonites within a shear zone, Cap de Creus

Shear zones that approximate to simple shear typically contain minor asymmetric folds, with the direction of overturning consistent with the overall shear sense. Some of these folds have highly curved hinge-lines and are referred to as sheath folds. Folds in shear zones can be inherited, formed due to the orientation of pre-shearing layering or formed due to instability within the shear flow.[15]

Folding in sediments Edit

Recently deposited sediments are normally mechanically weak and prone to remobilization before they become lithified, leading to folding. To distinguish them from folds of tectonic origin, such structures are called synsedimentary (formed during sedimentation).

Slump folding: When slumps form in poorly consolidated sediments, they commonly undergo folding, particularly at their leading edges, during their emplacement. The asymmetry of the slump folds can be used to determine paleoslope directions in sequences of sedimentary rocks.[16]

Dewatering: Rapid dewatering of sandy sediments, possibly triggered by seismic activity, can cause convolute bedding.[17]

Compaction: Folds can be generated in a younger sequence by differential compaction over older structures such as fault blocks and reefs.[18]

Igneous intrusion Edit

The emplacement of igneous intrusions tends to deform the surrounding country rock. In the case of high-level intrusions, near the Earth's surface, this deformation is concentrated above the intrusion and often takes the form of folding, as with the upper surface of a laccolith.[19]

Flow folding Edit

 
Flow folding: depiction of the effect of an advancing ramp of rigid rock into compliant layers. Top: low drag by a ramp: layers are not altered in thickness; Bottom: high drag: lowest layers tend to crumple.[20]

The compliance of rock layers is referred to as competence: a competent layer or bed of rock can withstand an applied load without collapsing and is relatively strong, while an incompetent layer is relatively weak. When rock behaves as a fluid, as in the case of very weak rock such as rock salt, or any rock that is buried deeply enough, it typically shows flow folding (also called passive folding, because little resistance is offered): the strata appear shifted undistorted, assuming any shape impressed upon them by surrounding more rigid rocks. The strata simply serve as markers of the folding.[21] Such folding is also a feature of many igneous intrusions and glacier ice.[22]

Folding mechanisms Edit

Folding of rocks must balance the deformation of layers with the conservation of volume in a rock mass. This occurs by several mechanisms.

Flexural slip Edit

Flexural slip allows folding by creating layer-parallel slip between the layers of the folded strata, which, altogether, result in deformation. A good analogy is bending a phone book, where volume preservation is accommodated by slip between the pages of the book.

The fold formed by the compression of competent rock beds is called "flexure fold".

Buckling Edit

Typically, folding is thought to occur by simple buckling of a planar surface and its confining volume. The volume change is accommodated by layer parallel shortening the volume, which grows in thickness. Folding under this mechanism is typical of a similar fold style, as thinned limbs are shortened horizontally and thickened hinges do so vertically.

Mass displacement Edit

If the folding deformation cannot be accommodated by a flexural slip or volume-change shortening (buckling), the rocks are generally removed from the path of the stress. This is achieved by pressure dissolution, a form of metamorphic process, in which rocks shorten by dissolving constituents in areas of high strain and redepositing them in areas of lower strain. Folds generated in this way include examples in migmatites and areas with a strong axial planar cleavage.

Mechanics of folding Edit

Folds in the rock are formed about the stress field in which the rocks are located and the rheology, or method of response to stress, of the rock at the time at which the stress is applied.

The rheology of the layers being folded determines characteristic features of the folds that are measured in the field. Rocks that deform more easily form many short-wavelength, high-amplitude folds. Rocks that do not deform as easily form long-wavelength, low-amplitude folds.

Economic implications Edit

Mining industry Edit

 
anticline oil trap

Layers of rock that fold into a hinge need to accommodate large deformations in the hinge zone. This results in voids between the layers. These voids, and especially the fact that the water pressure is lower in the voids than outside of them, act as triggers for the deposition of minerals. Over millions of years, this process is capable of gathering large quantities of trace minerals from large expanses of rock and depositing them at very concentrated sites. This may be a mechanism that is responsible for the veins. To summarize, when searching for veins of valuable minerals, it might be wise to look for highly folded rock, and this is the reason why the mining industry is very interested in the theory of geological folding.[23]

Oil industry Edit

Anticlinal traps are formed by folding of rock. For example, if a porous sandstone unit covered with low permeability shale is folded into an anticline, it may form a hydrocarbons trap, oil accumulating in the crest of the fold. Most anticlinal traps are produced as a result of sideways pressure, folding the layers of rock, but can also occur from sediments being compacted.[24]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ M.J. Fleury, The description of folds, Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, Volume 75, Issue 4, 1964, Pages 461-492, ISSN 0016-7878, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7878(64)80023-7.
  2. ^ Davis, George H.; Reynolds, Stephen J. (1996). "Folds". Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions. New York: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 372–424. ISBN 0-471-52621-5. after Donath, F.A.; Parker, R.B. (1964). "Folds and Folding". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 75 (1): 45–62. Bibcode:1964GSAB...75...45D. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1964)75[45:FAF]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0016-7606.
  3. ^ Sudipta Sengupta; Subir Kumar Ghosh; Kshitindramohan Naha (1997). Evolution of geological structures in micro- to macro-scales. Springer. p. 222. ISBN 0-412-75030-9.
  4. ^ RG Park (2004). "Fold axis and axial plane". Foundations of structural geology (3rd ed.). Routledge. p. 26. ISBN 0-7487-5802-X.
  5. ^ Barnes, J. W.; Lisle, R. J. (2013). "5 Field Measurements and Techniques". Basic geological mapping: 4th Edition. John Wiley & Sons. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-118-68542-6.
  6. ^ Lisle, Richard J (2004). "Folding". Geological Structures and Maps: 3rd Edition. Elsevier. pp. 33. ISBN 0-7506-5780-4.
  7. ^ Neville J. Price; John W. Cosgrove (1990). "Figure 10.14: Classification of fold profiles using dip isogon patterns". Analysis of geological structures. Cambridge University Press. p. 246. ISBN 0-521-31958-7.
  8. ^ See, for example, R. G. Park (2004). "Figure 3.12: Fold classification based upon dip diagrams". Foundations of structural geology (3rd ed.). Routledge. p. 31 ff. ISBN 0-7487-5802-X.
  9. ^ a b Park, R.G. (2004). Foundation of Structural Geology (3 ed.). Routledge. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7487-5802-9.
  10. ^ Ramsay, J.G.; Huber M.I. (1987). The techniques of modern structural geology. Vol. 2 (3 ed.). Academic Press. p. 392. ISBN 978-0-12-576922-8. Retrieved 2009-11-01.
  11. ^ Withjack, M.O.; Schlische (2006). "Geometric and experimental models of extensional fault-bend folds". In Buiter S.J.H. & Schreurs G. (ed.). Analogue and numerical modelling of crustal-scale processes. Vol. Special Publications 253. R.W. Geological Society, London. pp. 285–305. ISBN 978-1-86239-191-8. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  12. ^ Rowland, S.M.; Duebendorfer E.M.; Schieflebein I.M. (2007). Structural analysis and synthesis: a laboratory course in structural geology (3 ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. p. 301. ISBN 978-1-4051-1652-7. Retrieved 2009-11-01.
  13. ^ Jackson, C.A.L.; Gawthorpe R.L.; Sharp I.R. (2006). (PDF). Journal of Structural Geology. 28 (3): 519–535. Bibcode:2006JSG....28..519J. doi:10.1016/j.jsg.2005.11.009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-16. Retrieved 2009-11-01.
  14. ^ Reicherter, K.; Froitzheim, N.; Jarosinki, M.; Badura, J.; Franzke, H.-J.; Hansen, M.; Hübscher, C.; Müller, R.; Poprawa, P.; Reinecker, J.; Stackebrandt, W; Voigt, T.; von Eynatten, H.; Zuchiewicz, W. (2008). "19. Alpine Tectonics north of the Alps". In McCann, T. (ed.). The Geology of Central Europe. Geological Society, London. pp. 1233–1285. ISBN 978-1-86239-264-9. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  15. ^ Carreras, J.; Druguet E.; Griera A. (2005). . Journal of Structural Geology. 27 (7): 1229–1251. Bibcode:2005JSG....27.1229C. doi:10.1016/j.jsg.2004.08.004. Archived from the original on 2012-08-17. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  16. ^ Bradley, D.; Hanson L. (1998). (PDF). Journal of Geology. 106 (3): 305–318. Bibcode:1998JG....106..305B. doi:10.1086/516024. S2CID 129086677. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  17. ^ Nichols, G. (1999). "17. Sediments into rocks: post-depositional processes". Sedimentology and stratigraphy. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 355. ISBN 978-0-632-03578-6. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  18. ^ Hyne, N.J. (2001). Nontechnical guide to petroleum geology, exploration, drilling, and production. PennWell Books. p. 598. ISBN 978-0-87814-823-3. Retrieved 2009-11-01.
  19. ^ Orchuela, I.; Lara M.E.; Suarez M. (2003). "Productive Large Scale Folding Associated with Igneous Intrusions: El Trapial Field, Neuquen Basin, Argentina" (PDF). AAPG Abstracts. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  20. ^ Arvid M. Johnson; Raymond C. Fletcher (1994). "Figure 2.6". Folding of viscous layers: mechanical analysis and interpretation of structures in deformed rock. Columbia University Press. p. 87. ISBN 0-231-08484-6.
  21. ^ Park, R.G. (1997). Foundations of structural geology (3rd ed.). Routledge. p. 109. ISBN 0-7487-5802-X.;RJ Twiss; EM Moores (1992). "Figure 12.8: Passive shear folding". Structural geology (2nd ed.). Macmillan. pp. 241–242. ISBN 0-7167-2252-6.
  22. ^ Hudleston, P.J. (1977). "Similar folds, recumbent folds and gravity tectonics in ice and rocks". Journal of Geology. 85 (1): 113–122. Bibcode:1977JG.....85..113H. doi:10.1086/628272. JSTOR 30068680. S2CID 129424734.
  23. ^ "Geological Folding and the Presence of Minerals".
  24. ^ "Oil and gas traps - Energy Education".

Further reading Edit

  • McKnight, Tom L.; Hess, Darrel (2000). "The Internal Processes: Folding". Physical Geography: A Landscape Appreciation. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. pp. 409–14. ISBN 0-13-020263-0 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Pollard, David D.; Fletcher, Raymond C. (2005). Fundamentals of Structural Geology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-83927-0 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Ramsay, J.G., 1967, Folding and fracturing of rocks: McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 560pp., ISBN 193066589X

External links Edit

  • Mark Peletier
  • Oil and gas traps

fold, geology, structural, geology, fold, stack, originally, planar, surfaces, such, sedimentary, strata, that, bent, curved, folded, during, permanent, deformation, folds, rocks, vary, size, from, microscopic, crinkles, mountain, sized, folds, they, occur, si. In structural geology a fold is a stack of originally planar surfaces such as sedimentary strata that are bent or curved folded during permanent deformation Folds in rocks vary in size from microscopic crinkles to mountain sized folds They occur as single isolated folds or in periodic sets known as fold trains Synsedimentary folds are those formed during sedimentary deposition Folds of alternate layers of limestone and chert occur in Greece The limestone and chert were originally deposited as flat layers on the floor of a deep sea basin These folds were produced by Alpine deformation Folds form under varied conditions of stress pore pressure and temperature gradient as evidenced by their presence in soft sediments the full spectrum of metamorphic rocks and even as primary flow structures in some igneous rocks A set of folds distributed on a regional scale constitutes a fold belt a common feature of orogenic zones Folds are commonly formed by shortening of existing layers but may also be formed as a result of displacement on a non planar fault fault bend fold at the tip of a propagating fault fault propagation fold by differential compaction or due to the effects of a high level igneous intrusion e g above a laccolith Kink band folds in the Permian of New Mexico USARainbow Basin syncline in the Barstow Formation near Barstow CaliforniaContents 1 Fold terminology 2 Descriptive features 2 1 Fold size 2 2 Fold shape 2 3 Fold tightness 2 4 Fold symmetry 2 5 Facing and vergence 2 6 Deformation style classes 3 Types of fold 3 1 Linear 3 2 Other 4 Causes of folding 4 1 Layer parallel shortening 4 2 Fault related folding 4 2 1 Fault bend folding 4 2 2 Fault propagation folding 4 2 3 Detachment folding 4 3 Folding in shear zones 4 4 Folding in sediments 4 5 Igneous intrusion 4 6 Flow folding 5 Folding mechanisms 5 1 Flexural slip 5 2 Buckling 5 3 Mass displacement 6 Mechanics of folding 7 Economic implications 7 1 Mining industry 7 2 Oil industry 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Further reading 10 1 External linksFold terminology Edit Fold sketch 3D modelThe fold hinge is the line joining points of maximum curvature on a folded surface This line may be either straight or curved The term hinge line has also been used for this feature 1 A fold surface seen perpendicular to its shortening direction can be divided into hinge and limb portions the limbs are the flanks of the fold and the limbs converge at the hinge zone Within the hinge zone lies the hinge point which is the point of minimum radius of curvature maximum curvature of the fold The crest of the fold represents the highest point of the fold surface whereas the trough is the lowest point The inflection point of a fold is the point on a limb at which the concavity reverses on regular folds this is the midpoint of the limb Flank amp hingeThe axial surface is defined as a plane connecting all the hinge lines of stacked folded surfaces If the axial surface is planar it is called an axial plane and can be described in terms of strike and dip Folds can have a fold axis A fold axis is the closest approximation to a straight line that when moved parallel to itself generates the form of the fold 2 Ramsay 1967 A fold that can be generated by a fold axis is called a cylindrical fold This term has been broadened to include near cylindrical folds Often the fold axis is the same as the hinge line 3 4 Descriptive features EditFold size Edit Minor folds are quite frequently seen in outcrop major folds seldom are except in the more arid countries Minor folds can however often provide the key to the major folds they are related to They reflect the same shape and style the direction in which the closures of the major folds lie and their cleavage indicates the attitude of the axial planes of the major folds and their direction of overturning 5 Fold shape Edit Chevron folds IrelandA fold can be shaped like a chevron with planar limbs meeting at an angular axis as cuspate with curved limbs as circular with a curved axis or as elliptical with unequal wavelength Fold tightness Edit Interlimb anglesFold tightness is defined by the size of the angle between the fold s limbs as measured tangential to the folded surface at the inflection line of each limb called the interlimb angle Gentle folds have an interlimb angle of between 180 and 120 open folds range from 120 to 70 close folds from 70 to 30 and tight folds from 30 to 0 6 Isoclines or isoclinal folds have an interlimb angle of between 10 and zero with essentially parallel limbs Fold symmetry Edit Not all folds are equal on both sides of the axis of the fold Those with limbs of relatively equal length are termed symmetrical and those with highly unequal limbs are asymmetrical Asymmetrical folds generally have an axis at an angle to the original unfolded surface they formed on Facing and vergence Edit Vergence is calculated in a direction perpendicular to the fold axis Deformation style classes Edit Ramsay classification of folds by convergence of dip isogons red lines 7 Folds that maintain uniform layer thickness are classed as concentric folds Those that do not are called similar folds Similar folds tend to display thinning of the limbs and thickening of the hinge zone Concentric folds are caused by warping from active buckling of the layers whereas similar folds usually form by some form of shear flow where the layers are not mechanically active Ramsay has proposed a classification scheme for folds that often is used to describe folds in profile based upon the curvature of the inner and outer lines of a fold and the behavior of dip isogons that is lines connecting points of equal dip on adjacent folded surfaces 8 Ramsay classification scheme for folds Class Curvature C Comment 1 Cinner gt Couter Dip isogons converge 1A Orthogonal thickness at hinge narrower than at limbs 1B Parallel folds 1C Orthogonal thickness at limbs narrower than at hinge 2 Cinner Couter Dip isogons are parallel similar folds 3 Cinner lt Couter Dip isogons divergeTypes of fold Edit An anticline in New Jersey A monocline at Colorado National Monument Recumbent fold King Oscar FjordLinear Edit Anticline linear strata normally dip away from the axial center oldest strata in center irrespective of orientation Syncline linear strata normally dip toward the axial center youngest strata in center irrespective of orientation Antiform linear strata dip away from the axial center age unknown or inverted Synform linear strata dip toward the axial center age unknown or inverted Monocline linear strata dip in one direction between horizontal layers on each side Recumbent linear fold axial plane oriented at a low angle resulting in overturned strata in one limb of the fold Other Edit Dome nonlinear strata dip away from center in all directions oldest strata in center Basin nonlinear strata dip toward center in all directions youngest strata in center Chevron angular fold with straight limbs and small hinges Slump typically monoclinal the result of differential compaction or dissolution during sedimentation and lithification Ptygmatic Folds are chaotic random and disconnected Typical of sedimentary slump folding migmatites and decollement detachment zones Parasitic short wavelength folds formed within a larger wavelength fold structure normally associated with differences in bed thickness 9 Disharmonic Folds in adjacent layers with different wavelengths and shapes 9 A homocline involves strata dipping in the same direction though not necessarily any folding Causes of folding EditFolds appear on all scales in all rock types at all levels in the crust They arise from a variety of causes Layer parallel shortening Edit Box fold in La Herradura Formation Morro Solar PeruWhen a sequence of layered rocks is shortened parallel to its layering this deformation may be accommodated in a number of ways homogeneous shortening reverse faulting or folding The response depends on the thickness of the mechanical layering and the contrast in properties between the layers If the layering does begin to fold the fold style is also dependent on these properties Isolated thick competent layers in a less competent matrix control the folding and typically generate classic rounded buckle folds accommodated by deformation in the matrix In the case of regular alternations of layers of contrasting properties such as sandstone shale sequences kink bands box folds and chevron folds are normally produced 10 Rollover anticline Ramp anticline Fault propagation foldFault related folding Edit Many folds are directly related to faults associated with their propagation displacement and the accommodation of strains between neighboring faults Fault bend folding Edit Fault bend folds are caused by displacement along a non planar fault In non vertical faults the hanging wall deforms to accommodate the mismatch across the fault as displacement progresses Fault bend folds occur in both extensional and thrust faulting In extension listric faults form rollover anticlines in their hanging walls 11 In thrusting ramp anticlines form whenever a thrust fault cuts up section from one detachment level to another Displacement over this higher angle ramp generates the folding 12 Fault propagation folding Edit Fault propagation folds or tip line folds are caused when displacement occurs on an existing fault without further propagation In both reverse and normal faults this leads to folding of the overlying sequence often in the form of a monocline 13 Detachment folding Edit When a thrust fault continues to displace above a planar detachment without further fault propagation detachment folds may form typically of box fold style These generally occur above a good detachment such as in the Jura Mountains where the detachment occurs on middle Triassic evaporites 14 Folding in shear zones Edit Dextral sense shear folds in mylonites within a shear zone Cap de CreusShear zones that approximate to simple shear typically contain minor asymmetric folds with the direction of overturning consistent with the overall shear sense Some of these folds have highly curved hinge lines and are referred to as sheath folds Folds in shear zones can be inherited formed due to the orientation of pre shearing layering or formed due to instability within the shear flow 15 Folding in sediments Edit Recently deposited sediments are normally mechanically weak and prone to remobilization before they become lithified leading to folding To distinguish them from folds of tectonic origin such structures are called synsedimentary formed during sedimentation Slump folding When slumps form in poorly consolidated sediments they commonly undergo folding particularly at their leading edges during their emplacement The asymmetry of the slump folds can be used to determine paleoslope directions in sequences of sedimentary rocks 16 Dewatering Rapid dewatering of sandy sediments possibly triggered by seismic activity can cause convolute bedding 17 Compaction Folds can be generated in a younger sequence by differential compaction over older structures such as fault blocks and reefs 18 Igneous intrusion Edit The emplacement of igneous intrusions tends to deform the surrounding country rock In the case of high level intrusions near the Earth s surface this deformation is concentrated above the intrusion and often takes the form of folding as with the upper surface of a laccolith 19 Flow folding Edit Flow folding depiction of the effect of an advancing ramp of rigid rock into compliant layers Top low drag by a ramp layers are not altered in thickness Bottom high drag lowest layers tend to crumple 20 The compliance of rock layers is referred to as competence a competent layer or bed of rock can withstand an applied load without collapsing and is relatively strong while an incompetent layer is relatively weak When rock behaves as a fluid as in the case of very weak rock such as rock salt or any rock that is buried deeply enough it typically shows flow folding also called passive folding because little resistance is offered the strata appear shifted undistorted assuming any shape impressed upon them by surrounding more rigid rocks The strata simply serve as markers of the folding 21 Such folding is also a feature of many igneous intrusions and glacier ice 22 Folding mechanisms EditFolding of rocks must balance the deformation of layers with the conservation of volume in a rock mass This occurs by several mechanisms Flexural slip Edit Flexural slip allows folding by creating layer parallel slip between the layers of the folded strata which altogether result in deformation A good analogy is bending a phone book where volume preservation is accommodated by slip between the pages of the book The fold formed by the compression of competent rock beds is called flexure fold Buckling Edit Typically folding is thought to occur by simple buckling of a planar surface and its confining volume The volume change is accommodated by layer parallel shortening the volume which grows in thickness Folding under this mechanism is typical of a similar fold style as thinned limbs are shortened horizontally and thickened hinges do so vertically Mass displacement Edit If the folding deformation cannot be accommodated by a flexural slip or volume change shortening buckling the rocks are generally removed from the path of the stress This is achieved by pressure dissolution a form of metamorphic process in which rocks shorten by dissolving constituents in areas of high strain and redepositing them in areas of lower strain Folds generated in this way include examples in migmatites and areas with a strong axial planar cleavage Mechanics of folding EditFolds in the rock are formed about the stress field in which the rocks are located and the rheology or method of response to stress of the rock at the time at which the stress is applied The rheology of the layers being folded determines characteristic features of the folds that are measured in the field Rocks that deform more easily form many short wavelength high amplitude folds Rocks that do not deform as easily form long wavelength low amplitude folds Economic implications EditMining industry Edit anticline oil trapLayers of rock that fold into a hinge need to accommodate large deformations in the hinge zone This results in voids between the layers These voids and especially the fact that the water pressure is lower in the voids than outside of them act as triggers for the deposition of minerals Over millions of years this process is capable of gathering large quantities of trace minerals from large expanses of rock and depositing them at very concentrated sites This may be a mechanism that is responsible for the veins To summarize when searching for veins of valuable minerals it might be wise to look for highly folded rock and this is the reason why the mining industry is very interested in the theory of geological folding 23 Oil industry Edit Anticlinal traps are formed by folding of rock For example if a porous sandstone unit covered with low permeability shale is folded into an anticline it may form a hydrocarbons trap oil accumulating in the crest of the fold Most anticlinal traps are produced as a result of sideways pressure folding the layers of rock but can also occur from sediments being compacted 24 See also Edit3D fold evolution Orogeny Mountain building Rock mechanics Thrust faultNotes Edit M J Fleury The description of folds Proceedings of the Geologists Association Volume 75 Issue 4 1964 Pages 461 492 ISSN 0016 7878 https doi org 10 1016 S0016 7878 64 80023 7 Davis George H Reynolds Stephen J 1996 Folds Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions New York John Wiley amp Sons pp 372 424 ISBN 0 471 52621 5 after Donath F A Parker R B 1964 Folds and Folding Geological Society of America Bulletin 75 1 45 62 Bibcode 1964GSAB 75 45D doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1964 75 45 FAF 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Sudipta Sengupta Subir Kumar Ghosh Kshitindramohan Naha 1997 Evolution of geological structures in micro to macro scales Springer p 222 ISBN 0 412 75030 9 RG Park 2004 Fold axis and axial plane Foundations of structural geology 3rd ed Routledge p 26 ISBN 0 7487 5802 X Barnes J W Lisle R J 2013 5 Field Measurements and Techniques Basic geological mapping 4th Edition John Wiley amp Sons p 79 ISBN 978 1 118 68542 6 Lisle Richard J 2004 Folding Geological Structures and Maps 3rd Edition Elsevier pp 33 ISBN 0 7506 5780 4 Neville J Price John W Cosgrove 1990 Figure 10 14 Classification of fold profiles using dip isogon patterns Analysis of geological structures Cambridge University Press p 246 ISBN 0 521 31958 7 See for example R G Park 2004 Figure 3 12 Fold classification based upon dip diagrams Foundations of structural geology 3rd ed Routledge p 31 ff ISBN 0 7487 5802 X a b Park R G 2004 Foundation of Structural Geology 3 ed Routledge p 33 ISBN 978 0 7487 5802 9 Ramsay J G Huber M I 1987 The techniques of modern structural geology Vol 2 3 ed Academic Press p 392 ISBN 978 0 12 576922 8 Retrieved 2009 11 01 Withjack M O Schlische 2006 Geometric and experimental models of extensional fault bend folds In Buiter S J H amp Schreurs G ed Analogue and numerical modelling of crustal scale processes Vol Special Publications 253 R W Geological Society London pp 285 305 ISBN 978 1 86239 191 8 Retrieved 2009 10 31 Rowland S M Duebendorfer E M Schieflebein I M 2007 Structural analysis and synthesis a laboratory course in structural geology 3 ed Wiley Blackwell p 301 ISBN 978 1 4051 1652 7 Retrieved 2009 11 01 Jackson C A L Gawthorpe R L Sharp I R 2006 Style and sequence of deformation during extensional fault propagation PDF Journal of Structural Geology 28 3 519 535 Bibcode 2006JSG 28 519J doi 10 1016 j jsg 2005 11 009 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 16 Retrieved 2009 11 01 Reicherter K Froitzheim N Jarosinki M Badura J Franzke H J Hansen M Hubscher C Muller R Poprawa P Reinecker J Stackebrandt W Voigt T von Eynatten H Zuchiewicz W 2008 19 Alpine Tectonics north of the Alps In McCann T ed The Geology of Central Europe Geological Society London pp 1233 1285 ISBN 978 1 86239 264 9 Retrieved 2009 10 31 Carreras J Druguet E Griera A 2005 Shear zone related folds Journal of Structural Geology 27 7 1229 1251 Bibcode 2005JSG 27 1229C doi 10 1016 j jsg 2004 08 004 Archived from the original on 2012 08 17 Retrieved 2009 10 31 Bradley D Hanson L 1998 Paleoslope Analysis of Slump Folds in the Devonian Flysch of Maine PDF Journal of Geology 106 3 305 318 Bibcode 1998JG 106 305B doi 10 1086 516024 S2CID 129086677 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2009 10 31 Nichols G 1999 17 Sediments into rocks post depositional processes Sedimentology and stratigraphy Wiley Blackwell p 355 ISBN 978 0 632 03578 6 Retrieved 2009 10 31 Hyne N J 2001 Nontechnical guide to petroleum geology exploration drilling and production PennWell Books p 598 ISBN 978 0 87814 823 3 Retrieved 2009 11 01 Orchuela I Lara M E Suarez M 2003 Productive Large Scale Folding Associated with Igneous Intrusions El Trapial Field Neuquen Basin Argentina PDF AAPG Abstracts Retrieved 2009 10 31 Arvid M Johnson Raymond C Fletcher 1994 Figure 2 6 Folding of viscous layers mechanical analysis and interpretation of structures in deformed rock Columbia University Press p 87 ISBN 0 231 08484 6 Park R G 1997 Foundations of structural geology 3rd ed Routledge p 109 ISBN 0 7487 5802 X RJ Twiss EM Moores 1992 Figure 12 8 Passive shear folding Structural geology 2nd ed Macmillan pp 241 242 ISBN 0 7167 2252 6 Hudleston P J 1977 Similar folds recumbent folds and gravity tectonics in ice and rocks Journal of Geology 85 1 113 122 Bibcode 1977JG 85 113H doi 10 1086 628272 JSTOR 30068680 S2CID 129424734 Geological Folding and the Presence of Minerals Oil and gas traps Energy Education Further reading EditMcKnight Tom L Hess Darrel 2000 The Internal Processes Folding Physical Geography A Landscape Appreciation Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall pp 409 14 ISBN 0 13 020263 0 via Archive Foundation Pollard David D Fletcher Raymond C 2005 Fundamentals of Structural Geology Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 83927 0 via Archive Foundation Ramsay J G 1967 Folding and fracturing of rocks McGraw Hill Book Company New York 560pp ISBN 193066589XExternal links Edit The Wikibook Historical Geology has a page on the topic of Folds Wikimedia Commons has media related to folds Mark Peletier Oil and gas traps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fold geology amp oldid 1172236515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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