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Deformation-induced right-side-up pseudo-stratigraphy of the early Paleozoic Joseon Supergroup in the southeastern Danyang area, South Korea.

Authors :
Uhmb, Tae-Hoon
Ree, Jin-Han
Kim, Hyeong Soo
Source :
Geosciences Journal; Jun2024, Vol. 28 Issue 3, p287-299, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The formations in the early Paleozoic Joseon Supergroup (mainly carbonates with subordinate siliciclastics) within the Taebaeksan Basin in the Danyang area, South Korea, show an apparent right-side-up homoclinal stratigraphy without repetition or omission of any formation, and it was therefore thought that the NW-dipping formation boundaries are primary depositional contacts. Our detailed examination revealed, however, that the formation boundaries are reverse-slip shear zones parallel to the second-generation foliation (S<subscript>2</subscript>) crenulating transposed S<subscript>0</subscript>//S<subscript>1</subscript> foliation and that WNW-dipping bedding planes (S<subscript>0</subscript>) are only locally preserved. The most penetrative regional planar structure in the area is the NNW-dipping first-generation foliation (S<subscript>1</subscript>) that is defined by compositional layering and is parallel to the axial planes of isoclinal F<subscript>1</subscript> folds. Isoclinal to close F<subscript>1</subscript> folds occur on both the mesoscopic and macroscopic scale, whereas tight to close F<subscript>2</subscript> folds occur locally only on the mesoscopic scale. D<subscript>1</subscript> deformation presumably involved a NNW-SSE horizontal contraction and resulted in the buckle folding and transposition of S<subscript>0</subscript>. D<subscript>2</subscript> deformation involved a NW-SE contraction, probably at a high angle to the S<subscript>0</subscript>//S<subscript>1</subscript> transposed layers, and produced passive shear folding of S<subscript>0</subscript>//S<subscript>1</subscript> with S<subscript>2</subscript> crenulation cleavages as discrete shear surfaces. Shearing deformation was strongly localized along some S<subscript>2</subscript> foliation planes, resulting in reverse shear zones that represent the current 'pseudo'-formation boundaries. Based on zircons U-Pb ages, we suggest that the Okdong Fault was initiated from an unconformable boundary between the Precambrian basement gneiss and overlying sediments of the Paleozoic Taebaeksan Basin, probably during the Middle Jurassic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
12264806
Volume :
28
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Geosciences Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177191621
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12303-024-0008-2