Ultramylonite
formation and strain localization in granitic
rocksTop of page
My latest project examines the
processes that enabled strain localization and
the formation of a 200-400-m-wide ultramylonite
zone in granitic rocks cut by the Kellyland
shear zone in eastern Maine. This project
combines whole-rock geochemical analyses of
undeformed granite, mylonites, and
ultramylonites with outcrop-scale analyses of
strain localization, and detailed microstructural
observations. These results will lead to
a better understanding of why strain is
localized in shear zones near the
brittle-plastic transition, how large
ultramylonite zones form, and how these
deformation processes affect the
rheological evolution of these fault
zones.
Evolution of the
Medicine Bow orogenic beltTop of page
The
Medicine Bow orogeny marks the onset of the
accretion of over 1000 km of continental crust onto
the southern Margin of the Archean Wyoming Province.
The suture between Archean rocks and Proterozoic
rocks is marked by a network of subvertical shear
zones collectively known as the Cheyenne Belt. This
project tested existing models for the Medicine Bow
orogeny using detailed kinematic analyses of the
Cheyenne belt shear zones. Initially our more
detailed analyses of these shear zones agreed with
existing datasets. However, we interpreted the Cheyenne belt
in these areas as a stretching fault system rather
than a thrust system rotated into its present-day
subvertical orientation during late-stage folding (Sullivan et al., 2011 [PDF]).
Subsequently, we found evidence for significant
sinistal strike-slip motion in the Cheyenne belt
shear zones. Fabrics related to sinsitral
strike-slip are largely overprinted by fabrics
related to SE-side-up motion, but serveral lines of
evidence indicate that this was the dominant
deformation style along the belt. These data led us
to propose a new model for the evolution of the
Medicine Bow orogenic belt (Sullivan and Beane, in
press [PDF]).
Quartz
crystallographic fabrics formed under
constrictional strainTop of page
My
colleague, Rachel
Beane, and I analyzed quartz crystallographic
fabrics in L tectonite samples from the Pigeon Point
high-strain zone, Klamath Mountains, California
(Sullivan and Beane, 2010 [PDF]).
We
concluded
that
these unusual asymmetrical crystallographic fabrics
formed under near-constrictional conditions, and
that the asymetry is a result of a small component
of noncoaxial flow. Moreover, our results provide
the first confirmation of the a-axis patterns
predicted to form during constrictional deformation,
and they demonstrate that c-axis fabric girdles
formed during constriction widen with increasing
temperature.
My Ph.D. dissertation
consisted of three field-based case studies of
high-strain zones that contain significant domains
of L and L>S tectonites in diverse structural,
rheological, and tectonic settings. These areas
include: 1) granitic rocks that suffered
contractional deformation associated with
continental assembly exposed in the Laramie
Mountains, Wyo. (Sullivan, 2006 [PDF]);
2) mafic metavolcanic rocks deformed during oceanic
terrane accretion exposed in the Klamath Mountains,
Cal. (Sullivan, 2009 [PDF]); and 3) quartzite, schist, and granite
deformed in a footwall shear zone of a metamorphic
core complex exposed in the Raft River Mountains,
Utah (Sullivan, 2008 [PDF]).
The results of these case studies are integrated
with additional published data and models to provide
a concise overview of L tectonites that will aid
geologists in interpreting this strain phenomenon
(Sullivan, in press [PDF]).
Northern Great Basin
metamorphic core complexesTop of page
In conjunction with
my Ph.D. adviser, Art
Snoke at the University of
Wyoming, I created an in-depth analysis of
the structural, magmatic, and metamorphic
histories of the SnakeRange,
Ruby-East Humboldt, and Albion-Raft River-Grouse
Creek metamorphic core complexes in the northern Great Basin (Sullivan and
Snoke, 2007 [PDF]).
This
synthis included a regional-scale along- and
across-strike examination of: 1) the processes
operating in the hinterland of the Sevier orogenic
belt and 2) its subsequent crustal-scale collapse
and the extensional exhumation of its mid-crustal
roots.
For my M.S. thesis,
under Rick
Law at Virginia
Tech, I produced a detailed description of
a dextral transpression zone, the White Mountain
shear zone (WMSZ), with a range of lineation
orientations and compared these natural data to
numerical models that predict a change in the
maximum stretching direction from subhorizontal
to subvertical (Sullivan and Law, 2007 [PDF]).
My
data shows that the WMSZ does not match any of
the existing numerical models. Therefore, we
proposed that the WMSZ contained stable,
segregated, coeval kinematic domains of
simple-shear-dominated fabrics and
pure-shear-dominated fabrics that accommodate
the transcurrent and contractional components of
deformation separately.
Sullivan, W. A., and
Beane, R. J., in press, A new view of an old suture
zone: Evidence for sinistral transpression in the
Cheyenne belt: Geological Society of America Bulletin
[PDF].
Sullivan, W. A., in press,
L tectonites: Journal of Structural Geology. [PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., Beane, R.
J., Beck, E. N., Fereday, W. H., and Roberts-Pierel,
A. M., 2011, Testing the transpression hypothesis in
the western part of the Cheyenne belt, Medicine Bow
Mountains, southeastern Wyoming: Rocky Mountain
Geology, v. 46, p. 111-135. [PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., and
Beane, R. J., 2010, Asymmetrical quartz
crystallographic fabrics produced during
constrictional deformation: Journal of Structural
Geology, v. 32, p. 1430-1443. [PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., 2009, Kinematic significance of L
tectonites in the footwall of a major
terrane-bounding thrust fault, Klamath Mountains,
California, USA: Journal of Structural Geology, v.
31, p. 1,197-1,211. [PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., 2008, Significance of
transport-parallel strain variations in part of the
Raft River shear zone, Raft River Mountains, Utah,
USA: Journal of Structural Geology, v. 30, p.
138–158. [PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., and
Snoke, A. W., 2007, Comparative anatomy of
core-complex development in the northeastern Great
Basin, U.S.A.: Rocky Mountain Geology, v. 42, p. 1–29.
[PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., and Law,
R. D., 2007, Strain path partitioning in the
transpressional White Mountain shear zone, California
and Nevada: Journal of Structural Geology, v. 29, p.
583–598. [PDF]
Sullivan, W. A., 2006,
Structural significance of L tectonites in the
eastern-central Laramie Mountains, Wyoming: Journal of
Geology, v. 114, p. 513–531. [PDF]