AHLGREN, STEPHEN G. , University of Arizona, Dept. of Geosciences, Tucson, AZ
ABSTRACT: Three-Dimensional Structural
Modeling
of Foreland Basement Cored Uplifts,
Southern Utah
The dramatic monoclines flanking Laramide-aged Colorado Plateau uplifts are generally thought to form over high angle basement faults whose origin and deep geometry are often unknown. The northern end of the Waterpocket Fold in southern Utah comprises two such uplifts, the Circle Cliffs and Miners Mountain uplifts. Related mesoscale deformation includes broadly distributed jointing and faulting as well as penetrative deformation banding localized within the transfer zone at Sheets Gulch.
The opposite vergence of the two uplifts and localized strain within the transfer zone
suggests that the uplifts are cored by soft-linked, opposing basement fault zones.
Although unexposed at the surface, the geometry of these fault zones may be inferred from
down-plunge viewing and comprehensive, two-dimensional and three-dimensional structural
modeling
of the region using 2DMove and 3DMove. First, two-dimensional forward
modeling
based on balanced, serial cross sections will provide initial geometric and kinematic
constraints and will serve as correlation points for three-dimensional
modeling
of the
uplifts as fault propagation folds. Paleostress interpreted from
inversion
of surface
data
will be used to seed the computer models, and the validity of the models will be evaluated
by comparing synthetic three-dimensional strain
data
recorded during forward
modeling
with
regional strain
data
gleaned from field observations.
This integrative
modeling
will provide immediate insight into the applicability of
current basement cored uplift models to this and other basement cored systems, and, in
conjunction with mechanical testing of the Navajo Sandstone, may help to explain the
enigmatic, penetrative deformation banding at Sheets Gulch.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90909©2000 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid