Abstract

Summary It is very important to have good subsurface data in order to understand the nature and behaviour of thrust faults. Deep crustal seismic reflection profiling is the best technique currently available to make detailed subsurface studies of such important problems as the attitude and extent at depth of major faults, and hence deduce the mode of deformation and tectonic forces producing them. The Consortium for Continental Reflection Profiling (COCORP) is collecting large quantities of seismic reflection data from the deep crust and upper mantle in many parts of the U.S.A. Areas of major thrusting which have been profiled so far by COCORP include the Wind River Mountains in Wyoming and the Southern Appalachians of Georgia and Tennessee. Seismic profiles have been very successful in delineating a major thrust fault of moderate dip underlying the Wind River Mountains, thus demonstrating that compressional tectonics were dominant in their formation. In Georgia and Tennessee the seismic profiles demonstrate that the major tectonic feature of the Southern Appalachians is a relatively thin overthrust sheet, which may have moved at least 260 km. Deep crustal seismic reflection profiling thus appears to be an indispensable tool for the study of areas in which thrusting and nappe formation have occurred.

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