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'''Extensional tectonics''' is concerned with the structures formed, and the [[Tectonics|tectonic]] processes associated with, the stretching of the [[Crust (geology)|crust]] or [[lithosphere]].
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==Deformation styles==
The types of structure and the geometries formed depend on the amount of stretching involved. Stretching is generally measured using the parameter <math> \beta </math>, known as the ''beta factor'' where <math> \beta = \frac{t_{0}}{t_{1}} </math>, <math> t_{0} </math> is the initial crustal thickness and <math> t_{1} </math> is the final crustal thickness. It is also the equivalent of the [[Strain (materials science)|strain]] parameter ''stretch''.<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ycASqdxSG3YC&pg=PA64&dq=stretch+Foundations+of+structural+geology&lr=&ei=HjYVSrq3EZrEzASuzrH7Ag Park, R.G. 1997. Foundations of Structural Geology. 3rd edition, Routledge, 216pp.]</ref>
 
===Low beta factor===
In areas of relatively low crustal stretching, the dominant structures are high to moderate angle normal faults, with associated [[half grabens]] and [[tilted block faulting|tilted fault blocks]].<ref name ="kearey">[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HYqZntfg25UC&pg=PA153&dq=rift+dimensions&lr=&ei=iloVSvvcO4TOlQTDuvDUCQ Kearey, P., Klepeis, K.A. & Vine, F.J. 2008. Global Tectonics, Chapter 7, Continental rifts and rifted margins, WileyBlackwell, 496pp.]</ref>
 
===High beta factor===
In areas of high crustal stretching, individual [[extensional fault]]s may become rotated to too low a dip to remain active and a new set of faults may be generated.<ref>[http://bulletin.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/content/abstract/88/2/247 Proffett, J.M. 1977. Cenozoic geology of the Yerington district, Nevada, and implications for the nature of Basin and Range faulting. Bull. geol. Soc. Am. 88, 247-66.]</ref>  Large displacements may juxtapose syntectonic sediments against [[metamorphic rock]]s of the mid to lower crust and such structures are called [[detachment fault]]s. In some cases the detachments are folded such that the metamorphic rocks are exposed within antiformal closures and these are known as [[metamorphic core complex]]es.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}}
 
===Passive margins===
[[Passive margin]]s above a weak layer develop a specific set of extensional structures. Large listric regional (i.e. dipping towards the ocean) faults are developed with rollover [[anticline]]s and related crestal collapse [[graben]]s. On some margins, such as the [[Niger Delta]], large counter-regional faults are observed, dipping back towards the continent, forming large grabenal mini-basins with antithetic regional faults.<ref>[http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1999/ofr-99-0050/OF99-50H/OF99-50H.pdf Tuttle, M.L.W., Charpentier, R.R. & Brownfield, M.E. 2002. The Niger Delta Petroleum System: Niger Delta Province, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Equatorial Guinea, Africa. USGS Open-File Report 99-50-H.]</ref>
 
==Geological environments associated with extensional tectonics==
 
Areas of extensional tectonics are typically associated with:
[[File:Fault-Horst-Graben.svg|thumbnail|Horst and graben structure, typical rift related structure (direction of extension shown by red arrows).]]
===Continental rifts===
{{Main|Rift}}
Rifts are linear zones of localized crustal extension. They range in width from somewhat less than 100&nbsp;km up to several hundred km, consisting of one or more normal faults and related fault blocks.<ref name ="kearey" /> In individual rift segments one polarity (i.e. dip direction) normally dominates giving a [[half-graben]] geometry.<ref>[http://www.jstor.org/pss/55068 Ebinger, C.J., Jackson, J.A., Foster, A.N. & Hayward, N.J. 1999. Extensional basin geometry and the elastic lithosphere. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, A, 357, 741-765.]</ref> Other common geometries include [[metamorphic core complex]]es and [[tilted block faulting|tilted blocks]].  Examples of active continental rifts are the [[Baikal Rift Zone]] and the [[East African Rift]].
 
===Divergent plate boundaries===
{{Main|Divergent plate boundary}}
Divergent plate boundaries are zones of active extension as the crust newly formed at the [[mid-ocean ridge]] system becomes involved in the opening process.
 
===Gravitational spreading of zones of thickened crust===
Zones of thickened crust, such as those formed during [[continental collision|continent-continent collision]] tend to spread laterally; this spreading occurs even when the collisional event is still in progress.<ref>[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v294/n5840/abs/294410a0.html Tapponier, P. Mercier, J.L., Armijo, R., Tonglin, H, & Ji, Z. 1981. Field evidence for active normal faulting in Tibet. Nature, 294, 410-414.]</ref> After the collision has finished the zone of thickened crust generally undergoes gravitational collapse, often with the formation of very large extensional faults. Large-scale [[Devonian]] extension, for example, followed immediately after the end of the [[Caledonian orogeny]] particularly in East [[Greenland]] and western [[Norway]].<ref>[http://folk.uib.no/nglhe/Papers/Tectonics%201998%20Dunlap%20&%20Fossen.pdf Dunlap, J.W. & Fossen, H. 1998: Early Paleozoic orogenic collapse, tectonic stability, and late Paleozoic continental rifting revealed through thermochronology of K-feldspars, southern Norway. Tectonics 17, 604-620.]</ref><ref>[http://folk.uio.no/ebbe/Ebbe_Hartz/Publications_files/Hartz%20et%20al.,%202000,%20J.%20Geol.%20Soc.%20London,%20Dating%20the%20Fjord%20Region%20Detachment,%20Greenland.pdf Hartz, E.H, Andresen, A., Hodges K.V. & Martin, M.W., 2000, The Fjord Region Detachment Zone: A long-lived extensional fault in the East Greenland Caledonides, J. Geol. Soc. London, 158, 795-810.]</ref>
 
===Releasing bends along strike-slip faults===
When a [[Fault (geology)#Strike-slip faults|strike-slip fault]] is offset along strike such as to create a gap i.e. a left-stepping bend on a sinistral fault, a zone of extension or [[transtension]] is generated. Such bends are known as ''releasing bends'' or ''extensional stepovers'' and often form [[pull apart basin|pull-apart basins]] or ''rhombochasms''. Examples of active pull-apart basins include the [[Dead Sea]], formed at a left-stepping offset of the sinistral sense [[Dead Sea Transform]] system, and the [[Sea of Marmara]], formed at a right-stepping offset on the dextral sense [[North Anatolian Fault]] system.<ref>[http://bmeyer2.free.fr/pdf/2002-TerraNova.pdf Armijo, R., Meyer, B., Navarro, S., King, G. & Barka, A. 2002. Asymmetric slip partitioning in the Sea of Marmara pull-apart: a clue to propagation processes of the North Anatolian Fault? Terra Nova, 14, 80–86.]</ref>
 
===Back-arc basins===
{{Main|Back-arc basin}}
Back-arc basins form behind many [[subduction]] zones due to the effects of [[oceanic trench]] roll-back which leads to a zone of extension parallel to the [[island arc]].
 
===Passive margins===
A passive margin built out over a weaker layer, such as an overpressured [[mudstone]] or [[Rock salt|salt]], tends to spread laterally under its own weight. The inboard part of the sedimentary prism is affected by extensional faulting, balanced by outboard shortening.
 
==See also==
*[[Thrust tectonics]]
*[[Strike-slip tectonics]]
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
 
==External links==
* [http://folk.uib.no/nglhe/StructModulesTextbook/Extension.swf Extension: Chapter 17; A complimentary resource to Chapter 17 of the textbook "Strukturgeologi" by Haakon Fossen & Roy Gabrielsen]
 
[[Category:Structural geology]]
[[Category:Tectonics]]

Latest revision as of 03:41, 22 June 2014

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