REGIONAL SLATY CLEAVAGE FORMATION AND FOLD AXIS ROTATION BY REUSE ANDREACTIVATION OF PREEXISTING FOLIATIONS - THE FIERY CREEK SLATE BELT, NORTH QUEENSLAND

Authors
Citation
Bk. Davis et A. Forde, REGIONAL SLATY CLEAVAGE FORMATION AND FOLD AXIS ROTATION BY REUSE ANDREACTIVATION OF PREEXISTING FOLIATIONS - THE FIERY CREEK SLATE BELT, NORTH QUEENSLAND, Tectonophysics, 230(3-4), 1994, pp. 161-179
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
00401951
Volume
230
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
161 - 179
Database
ISI
SICI code
0040-1951(1994)230:3-4<161:RSCFAF>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
A deformation history, comprised of six separate deformation events of differing intensity, has affected the rocks of the South Palmer River region of the the Hodgkinson Province, north Queensland. Within this region, a zone of pervasive slaty cleavage, herein termed the Fiery Cr eek Slate Belt, has developed as a result of the superposition of fabr ics formed during several of these events. The most important processe s in the formation of this composite cleavage were the re-use and reac tivation of the favourably oriented, steep, N-S-trending S2 foliation by the intense fourth deformation event, D4. This produced micro-, mes o- and macroscopic folds in an originally shallow S3 foliation, produc ed during the intervening D3 deformation, with an axial planar S2-S4 f oliation. The D4 stretching lineation, L4(4), plunges subvertically to steeply north and indicates that shear during D4 was oriented steeply north-south. In the Fiery Creek Slate Belt, D2 fold axes are interpre ted to have formed in much shallower orientations than their present m oderately N-S-plunging to subvertical orientations. We consider this t o be a result of D4 shear, which caused variable degrees of rotation o f D2 fold axes toward the D4 stretching lineation due to subparallelis m of the bulk shortening directions of the D2 and D4 events. Near-tota l destruction of the pre-D4 foliations during slaty cleavage formation has produced a misleading impression of a simple deformation history. There is no relationship between metamorphic grade and intensity of s laty cleavage development.