Abstract

Detailed studies of the Purbeck Formation (Jurassic) in the Fossil Forest outcrop, Lulworth Cove (Dorset, southern England) allow to define a ~ 10 m-thick wedge of deformed layers comprising four juxtaposed structural levels (L2-L5) situated between two levels of non deformed layers (L1 and L6). L1 consists of limestone and L6 consists of limestone and intercalated shale / argillite. Within the wedge, the basal structural level (L2) consists of calcareous marls displaying pillow-like structures due to a layer-parallel anastomosed foliation, and evaporite, shale and chert displaying m-scale mushrooms; level L3 consists of evaporite and shale displaying cm- to dm-scale features like normal and thrust faults, folds, foliation and boudins; level L4 consists of evaporite and shale transformed into a tectonic melange; and level L5 consists of evaporite and limestone affected by m-scale folds, contraction and extension faults. Intensive fracturing of the layers around the hinges of the folds transformed L5 in a set of Broken Beds, The wedge deformed progressively, as it slided above a top-down to the west basal detachment along levels L3 and L4, and below a bottom-down to the west detachment established along a layer of calcareous shale (bottom of level L6). The structural analysis, together with other published data, all indicate that an event of extension affected regionally the area, earlier in the Alpine inversion of the Wessex Basin, during which the entire set of rocks tilted to the north and further slip occurred within the Broken Beds. The slide of a detachment-bounded wedge of rocks and the vertical partition of deformation styles and intensity of strain, all place the Fossil Forest outcrop as a key-field locality for direct observation of tectonic processes analogous to those currently recognized for deformation of the continental crust.

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