TY - JOUR
T1 - Joint development during fluctuation of the regional stress field in Southern Israel
AU - Eyal, Yehuda
AU - Gross, Michael R.
AU - Engelder, Terry
AU - Becker, Alexander
N1 - Funding Information:
Many of the structural relations and concepts discussed in this paper were the focus of Paul Hancock’s broad research interests in brittle microtectonics ( Hancock, 1969, 1985 ; Hancock et al., 1984 ; Bevan and Hancock, 1986 ; Dunne and Hancock, 1994 ) and neotectonics ( Hancock and Barka, 1987 ; Hancock, 1988 ; Hancock and Engelder, 1989 ; Stewart and Hancock, 1990, 1991 ; Hancock, 1991 ). Our research has greatly benefited from Paul Hancock’s contributions in these fields, and we are honored to contribute to the special issue of the Journal of Structural Geology celebrating Paul’s accomplishments. Funding for this research was provided by the United States–Israel Binational Science Foundation Grant 94-00396. We benefited from discussions with Martin Finn, Juan-Carlos Ortiz, and Scott Wilkins. Excellent reviews by Paul Gillespie, Roy Gabrielsen, and William Dunne greatly improved the paper.
PY - 2001/4/28
Y1 - 2001/4/28
N2 - Four trends of joint sets (WNW-ESE, NW-SE, NNW-SSE and NE-SW) are found in upper Turonian carbonate rocks within the Neqarot syncline of south-central Israel. The two most predominant sets strike parallel to the trend of maximum compressive stress directions (SH) associated with the plate-related Syrian Arc stress field (SAS; WNW-ESE) active during the Cretaceous to present and the perturbed regional stress field (NNW-SSE) related to stress accumulation on the Dead Sea Transform during the Miocene to the present. Eighty-two percent of the beds in this study contain joints parallel with the latter trend, whereas 42% contain joints parallel to the former trend. All beds with lawyer thickness to spacing ratio (FSR) > 1.5 have NNW-SSE joint sets compatible with the Dead Sea Transform stress field (DSS), whereas all joints sets that are not compatible with the DSS stress field fall beneath this value for FSR. Considering lithology, joints in five of six chalky limestone beds and all marly limestone beds are compatible with the DSS, whereas joints compatible with the SAS do not develop in these marly and chalky limestone beds. In the study area, the joint sets lack a consistent formation sequence where more than one set is found in a single bed. We use these observations to conclude that all studied joints are Miocene or younger, that the regional stress field from the Miocene to the present fluctuated, between DSS and SAS states, and that the higher FSRs correspond to a greater amount of joint-normal strain in response to the DSS.
AB - Four trends of joint sets (WNW-ESE, NW-SE, NNW-SSE and NE-SW) are found in upper Turonian carbonate rocks within the Neqarot syncline of south-central Israel. The two most predominant sets strike parallel to the trend of maximum compressive stress directions (SH) associated with the plate-related Syrian Arc stress field (SAS; WNW-ESE) active during the Cretaceous to present and the perturbed regional stress field (NNW-SSE) related to stress accumulation on the Dead Sea Transform during the Miocene to the present. Eighty-two percent of the beds in this study contain joints parallel with the latter trend, whereas 42% contain joints parallel to the former trend. All beds with lawyer thickness to spacing ratio (FSR) > 1.5 have NNW-SSE joint sets compatible with the Dead Sea Transform stress field (DSS), whereas all joints sets that are not compatible with the DSS stress field fall beneath this value for FSR. Considering lithology, joints in five of six chalky limestone beds and all marly limestone beds are compatible with the DSS, whereas joints compatible with the SAS do not develop in these marly and chalky limestone beds. In the study area, the joint sets lack a consistent formation sequence where more than one set is found in a single bed. We use these observations to conclude that all studied joints are Miocene or younger, that the regional stress field from the Miocene to the present fluctuated, between DSS and SAS states, and that the higher FSRs correspond to a greater amount of joint-normal strain in response to the DSS.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0035045797&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0191-8141(00)00096-1
DO - 10.1016/S0191-8141(00)00096-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0035045797
SN - 0191-8141
VL - 23
SP - 279
EP - 296
JO - Journal of Structural Geology
JF - Journal of Structural Geology
IS - 2-3
ER -