ISLAND ARCS AND CONVECTION.

Abstract

If island arcs are the outcrops of compressive faults, they cannot be products of a uniform field of compressive stress because their symmetry is lower. The polarity of the curvature, however, is provided if the compression is of convective origin. Incipient faulting is then followed by a convergence of the convective flow towards the fault, causing a convergence of the initially parallel stress trajectories. Since the fault propagates at right angle to the trajectories of maximum compressive stress, its outcrop becomes an arc convex towards the upstream side. In oceanic compressive faults due to convection the two conjugate fault planes are not equivalent because overthrusting of the downstream side by the upstream side would lead to the accumulation of a thick crust which would inhibit the progress of faulting along the plane, and because underthrusting is libricated by decomposing serpentine, fluxed basalt etc. This seems the reason why apparently in all long-lived oceanic compressive faults the upstream (usually the oceanward) side underthrusts the downstream side. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 01, 1966
Accession Number
AD0637140

Entities

People

  • E. Orowan

Organizations

  • Boeing

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Compression
  • Convection
  • Convergence
  • Curvature
  • Geometric Forms
  • Geometry
  • Geophysics
  • Lines (Geometry)
  • Polarity
  • Right Angles
  • Symmetry
  • Trajectories

Fields of Study

  • Geology

Readers

  • Combustion and Flow Dynamics.
  • Fluid Dynamics.
  • Seismology

Technology Areas

  • Autonomy