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Progressive back-warping of a rider block atop an actively exhuming, continental low-angle normal fault

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Abstract Can continental low-angle normal faults (LANFs) initiate and remain active at shallow ( Although the Mai'iu fault is still active in the west, to the east it dips 15–22°… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Can continental low-angle normal faults (LANFs) initiate and remain active at shallow ( Although the Mai'iu fault is still active in the west, to the east it dips 15–22° at the surface, and has been abandoned in favor of the younger, 42 ± 7° dipping Gwoira fault. Fault abandonment has caused part of the former hanging wall to be captured by the footwall. This rider block's structure records progressive shallowing of the Mai'iu fault concurrent with slip. We present 26Al/10Be cosmogenic nuclide burial dating; along with a recently published (U–Th-Sm)/He apatite and zircon age, these provide the first direct dating of the Gwoira conglomerate. These data imply inception of the Mai'iu fault before 3.12–6.04 Ma, and inception of the Gwoira fault between 2.29 and 5.62 Ma. Bedding fault cut-off angles suggest the Mai'iu fault did not initiate as a LANF. Rather, it initially dipped >44° at the surface, and was subsequently back-rotated while active to its present 15–22° surface dip. This suggests that continental LANFs initiate at moderate dips, and evolve according to the ‘rolling-hinge’ process.

Keywords: low angle; fault; mai fault; continental low; rider block; angle normal

Journal Title: Journal of Structural Geology
Year Published: 2020

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