Interpretation of Fault
-Controlled Ramp Structures in
Sedimentary Basins--Example from Caspian Sea Using Landsat TM Data
Assad Iranpanah
Lineaments on a series of edge-enhanced images (TM data) from a region around
the Caspian Sea form a geomorphically significant linear trend along the major
Caucasus-Kopeh Dagh fault
line. This
fault
represents the line of collision
between the Cimmerian continents and the Turan plate on the south and north,
respectively. The lineament zone manifests a ramp structure that forms a
relatively narrow topographic high in the Caspian Sea.
Paleogeographic studies of the Caspian Sea suggest that the basin is part of
the eastern Paratethys, which began to develop in the early Paleogene during the
Alpine-Himalayan uplift. On the basis of the lineaments and associated
geomorphic features, the Caspian Sea can be divided into southern, central, and
the northern Caspian subbasins. The Caucasus-Kopeh Dagh fault
line trends N80°W
and separates the southern Caspian from the central subbasin, approximately
along 40°N latitude. The boundary between the central and the northern subbasins
is also a linear topographic high which trends N70°E and lies approximately at
44 °N latitude. The southern and central subbasins have subequal areal extension
covering 35.64% and the 36.63% of the whole sea, whereas the northern subbasin
occupies only 27.73% of the basin.
The Caucasus-Kopeh Dagh linear feature is a dip-slip reverse fault
(Ashkhabad
fault
) with an apparent dextral horizontal component. Stress analysis utilizing
a deformation model of the active tectonism in the area suggests a mean
principal horizontal stress orientation that makes an angle of approximately 80°
with the Caucasus-Kopeh Dagh lineament trend. This lineament delineates the zone
of colliding continental plates between the Turan (Eurasia) and the Cimmerian
microcontinents on the north and south, respectively. The initial direction of
movement of the Cimmerian-Arabian plates was northeast, a counterclockwise
rotation. The rotation is reflected by dextral strike-slip movements along the
Ashkhabad
fault
, with a sharp change of the strike frequency diagrams of the
major line ments in the northern part of the Cimmerian microcontinents.
The Ashkhabad fault
line marks the late Paleozoic collision zone along the
southern boundary of the Hercynian orogenic belt of the Turan plate. The
Hercynian belt is not present to the south of the
fault
line, but its easterly
continuation can be traced east of the Germab-Baghan
fault
line and in the Hindu
Kush Mountains in northern Afghanistan. Additional paleogeographic,
paleomagnetic, geochronologic, and geologic studies are required to ascertain
the nature of the boundary of the Hercynian orogenic belt in this region.
The results of this investigation demonstrate that TM data are very useful in unravelling the tectonic history of intracontinental basins.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91022©1989 AAPG Annual Convention, April 23-26, 1989, San Antonio, Texas.