mirror of
https://expo.survex.com/repositories/expoweb/.git/
synced 2026-02-23 20:55:18 +00:00
[svn r3779] Added HTML files.
This commit is contained in:
177
years/1987/geolog.htm
Normal file
177
years/1987/geolog.htm
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,177 @@
|
||||
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN">
|
||||
<html lang=en>
|
||||
<head>
|
||||
<title>1987: Cambridge Underground report</title>
|
||||
</head>
|
||||
<body>
|
||||
<center><font size=-1>Cambridge Underground 1988 pp 8-13</font>
|
||||
|
||||
<h2>The Geology of the CUCC Expedition area,<br>
|
||||
Totengebirgs, Austria</h2>
|
||||
|
||||
<p><b>Jared West</b></center>
|
||||
|
||||
<p><u>Abstract</u>: The CUCC expedition area in Austria is situated in the
|
||||
Northern Calcareous Alps, the northern part of the Eastern Alps. The
|
||||
sedimentology and structural geology of the Northern Calcareous Alps is
|
||||
described.
|
||||
|
||||
<h3>Structure and Genesis of the Eastern Alps</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The caving area is situated in the Eastern Alps. The northern part of this
|
||||
range is known as the Northern Calcareous Alps (Nordkalkalpen). This is a
|
||||
band of MEsozoic limestones about 50km wide which stretches from Voral in the
|
||||
east to Vienna in the west. To the south is the axial zone of the Eastern
|
||||
Alps, and to the north is the Tertiary Molasse (Fig. 1). The Eastern Alps are
|
||||
considered to be made up of piles of horizontal sheets which may extend
|
||||
laterally for hundreds of kilometres, but which may be only a few kilometres
|
||||
thick. Three, possibly four, structural levels can be recognised. The
|
||||
basement rocks (gneiss) are overlain by Palæozoic and then Mesozoic
|
||||
sediments. Repetition of the sequence of Mesozoic sediments is the result of
|
||||
overthrusting of the sheets during the Tertiary. The strike of the rocks
|
||||
tends to be east-west as they are arched about an axis in this direction.
|
||||
Generally, the dip direction in the Northern Calcareous Alps is northward,
|
||||
because they are to the north of the axis.
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The thrusting and arching is related to a shortening of the crust in a
|
||||
north-south direction, which occurred during the Alpine mountain building
|
||||
period. The Alps were formed when the African tectonic plate ploughed into
|
||||
the Eurasian plate from the south. The Indian plate similarly ploughed into
|
||||
Tibet, creating the Himalayas. These processes of collision are still in
|
||||
progress; the Alps are still rising at about the same rate as they are being
|
||||
eroded. If uplift were to cease, and erosion continue at the present rate,
|
||||
the Alps would be denuded after just three million years. This is very little
|
||||
on the geological time scale.
|
||||
|
||||
<h3>Summary of the Geological History of the Calcareous Alps</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Due to subsidence in the basement in the Permian, an east-west zone of
|
||||
sedimentation was established. In some areas, evaporitic rocks (gypsum and
|
||||
salt) were laid down. These are characteristic of shallow seas in a hot
|
||||
climate. The facies belts were established in the Triassic, these being
|
||||
controlled largely by how fast the basement was subsiding. Where the rate of
|
||||
subsidence was fast, it outpaced deposition and the sea bottom subsided below
|
||||
the photic zone, resulting in deep water sediments rather than reefs. It can
|
||||
be concluded that subsidence was more rapid in the south of the depositional
|
||||
area during the Triassic. In the Jurassic, the pattern of subsidence changed,
|
||||
affecting the facies belts. There may have been local areas of elevation. In
|
||||
some areas depostion continued into the Cretaceous. During Late Cretaceous
|
||||
time, parts of the Calcareous Alpine facies became detached and slid over
|
||||
others. The main northwards movement leaving the Calcareous Alps in their
|
||||
present position occurred during the Eocene.
|
||||
|
||||
<h3>The Northern Calcareous Alps: Sedimentary Rock Types</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The oldest rocks seen in the area are of Triassic age, and were produced
|
||||
in a submarine reef environment. The existence of three distinct reef-related
|
||||
depositional environments (facies) can be inferred from the rocks (Fig. 2)
|
||||
|
||||
<ol>
|
||||
<li>Haupt Dolomit facies. This rock type was laid down behind the main reef,
|
||||
in the quiet back reef lagoon. Cycles of depostion are apparent as are
|
||||
periods of aerial exposure. The facies is mostly characteristic of the
|
||||
northern part of the Kalkalpen. It interfingers to the south with the
|
||||
Dachstein Limestone (Dachsteinkalk) unit. The maximum thickness of the Haupt
|
||||
Dolomit is 2000m.
|
||||
|
||||
<li>Dachstein Limestone facies (Dachsteinkalk). This is the cave-bearing
|
||||
formation and two lithologies are present. The first is a thinly bedded
|
||||
limestone of shallow water origin, again behind the main reef. The thinly
|
||||
bedded nature of the rock causes caverns to collapse before reaching any
|
||||
appreciable size. The second lithology is massively bedded limestone
|
||||
containing abundant fossils, and is extensively cavernous. It formed the main
|
||||
body of the reef. The maximum thickness, and hence cave depth potential, is
|
||||
1800m and the unit occurs mostly in the middle region of the Kalkalpen.
|
||||
|
||||
<li>Halstatt facies. This consists of red and black shales and pale deep
|
||||
water limestones, perhaps laid down further from the land than the other two
|
||||
types. It occurs to the south of, and interfingers with, the Dachstein
|
||||
Limestone facies.
|
||||
|
||||
</ol>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The younger Jurassic rocks correspond only slightly to the underlying
|
||||
Triassic in terms of depositional environment. In the North there are marls
|
||||
and cherty limestones, whereas in the South, reef limestone are more
|
||||
important. Units of coarse clastics (sandstones and breccias) occur.
|
||||
|
||||
<h3>Structure of the Northern Calcareous Alps</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Generally, the region is not intensely folded, being more characterised by
|
||||
broad open flexures with tight folding being confined to fault zones. The
|
||||
Triassic rocks have the form of almost horizontal thrust sheets. There is
|
||||
little disturbance along the thrust planes and these may be difficult to
|
||||
recognise. The sheets are broken into blocks by steeply dipping faults. Many
|
||||
of the 'hading rifts' in the caves have formed along such faults. Complex
|
||||
deviations from this structure occur where salt and anhydrite from the
|
||||
underlying Permian evaporite beds have penetrated the overlying Triassic
|
||||
strata in the form of Diapirs, as it has in the 'salt mountain' near
|
||||
Halstatt. It is thus generally agreed now that the rocks of the Northern
|
||||
Calcareous Alps are not in their original depositional location but have been
|
||||
brought in from the south by thrust faulting. This has been deduced from
|
||||
borehole information as well as from the outcrop pattern, though how far to
|
||||
the south the rocks were formed is not clear, nor is it agreed whether
|
||||
thrusting occurred mainly along one plane or equally along several.
|
||||
|
||||
<h3>Guide to the CUCC area: the Totengebirgs and the Loser Plateau</h3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>A map of the area is given (<a href="../../maps/jwfig3.htm">Fig. 3</a>).
|
||||
The Halstatt facies crops out in a fault bounded basin. In places it is
|
||||
overlain by the Zlambach beds and Lias marls. To the north are the
|
||||
Totengebirgs and to the south the Dachstein, where the massive coralliferous
|
||||
Dachstein limestone crops out. The Loser Plateau is in the upper right of the
|
||||
map: the plateau is believed to be an Upper Miocene erosion surface. walking
|
||||
from the car park at the Loser mountain restaurant along the Stogerweg
|
||||
footpath to the east, a remarkable wall of rock is seen to stnad high above
|
||||
the plateau. This is composed of Jurassic clastic rocks, with some Zlambach
|
||||
beds (uppermost Triassic) at their base. They are more resistant to
|
||||
weathering than the limestone. The limestone in the area immediately around
|
||||
the Loser carpark is the thinly bedded type, which is poorly cavernous. To
|
||||
find any decent sized caves one has to walk some 3km to the east where the
|
||||
massively bedded type is found. Unfortunately these types are not
|
||||
differentiated on the map. The depth potential of the area is limited to
|
||||
slightly more than a kilometre by the water table rather than the base of the
|
||||
Dachstein limestone, this being at the level of the surface of the adjacent
|
||||
lake Altausseer See.
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Acknowledgements: I am indebted to Hans Schönlaub of the Geologische
|
||||
Bundesanstalt, Wien for his help in sending literature, and to Professor
|
||||
Oxburgh of the Department of Earth Sciences, Cambridge, for allowing the
|
||||
reproduction of his diagrams.
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Bibliography:
|
||||
|
||||
<p>OXBURGH, E.R. (1968), The Geology of the Eastern Alps, The Geologists Association, London.
|
||||
|
||||
<p>PLOCHINGER, B. (1984), Nordkalkalpen, Monograph of the Austrian Geological Survey, Wien.
|
||||
|
||||
<p>TOLLMAN, A. (1985), Die Nordlichen Kalkalpen.
|
||||
|
||||
<hr>
|
||||
<!-- LINKS -->
|
||||
<img alt=">" src="../../../icons/lists/0.gif">
|
||||
Cambridge Underground 1988,
|
||||
<a href="../../../jnl/1988/index.htm">Table of Contents</a><br>
|
||||
<img alt=">" src="../../../icons/lists/0.gif">
|
||||
1987 Expedition info:<br>
|
||||
<img alt="--->" src="../../../icons/lists/1.gif">
|
||||
<a href="log.htm">Logbook</a><br>
|
||||
<img alt="--->" src="../../../icons/lists/1.gif">
|
||||
Cambridge Underground Expo Report:<br>
|
||||
<img alt="------>" src="../../../icons/lists/2.gif">
|
||||
<a href="report.htm">Expedition description</a><br>
|
||||
<img alt="------>" src="../../../icons/lists/2.gif">
|
||||
<a href="158gd.htm">Donner-und-Blitzen Höhle</a>, Mike Richardson<br>
|
||||
<img alt="------>" src="../../../icons/lists/2.gif">
|
||||
<a href="ent113.htm">Entrance 113</a>, Mike Richardson<br>
|
||||
<!-- <img alt="--->" src="../../../icons/lists/1.gif">
|
||||
<a href="bcracc.htm">BCRA Caves & Caving Report</a><br> -->
|
||||
<img alt=">" src="../../../icons/lists/0.gif">
|
||||
<a href="../../pubs.htm#1987">Index</a> to all publications<br>
|
||||
<img alt=">" src="../../../icons/lists/0.gif">
|
||||
<a href="../../index.htm">Back to Expeditions intro page</a><br>
|
||||
<img alt=">" src="../../../icons/lists/0.gif">
|
||||
<a href="../../../index.htm">CUCC Home Page</a>
|
||||
|
||||
</body>
|
||||
</html>
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user