Page 6 - i1052-5173-27-12
P. 6

A                                                                                                     character, composed of very thin radiolar-
B                                                                                                     ian chert beds intercalated with soft clay-
                                                                                                      stone and mudstone. Beneath the Lykaion
C                                                                                                     thrust fault the rocks are marked by a sys-
                                                                                                      tem of large upright to slightly overturned
Figure 3. (A) Mythen klippe, Central Switzerland. (The author thanks H. Röst and M. Steiner for per-  anticlines and synclines, which control the
mission to reproduce their Mythen image.) (B) Chief Mountain klippe, Glacier National Park, Mon-      geologic map relationships (Davis, 2009,
tana. To the Blackfoot people this mountain is Ninaistako. (The author thanks Marc Adamus for         2014) (see Figs. 2 and 5).
permission to reproduce his Chief Mountain photograph.) (C) South-directed photograph of the
Agios Elias klippe, Sanctuary of Zeus, Mount Lykaion.                                                   Limestone and interbedded siltstone of
                                                                                                      the Flysch Transition Beds Formation
the trace of this thrust fault, which I have  five formations shown in the map explana-               (Paleocene) crop out immediately below
named the Lykaion thrust, that is the         tion (Davis, 2009) (see Fig. 2). The oldest             the klippe and have eroded to an open,
archaeological boundary between the           Pindos Group formation (Chert Series                    relatively smooth landscape forming the
upper and lower levels of the sanctuary.      Beds Formation, Jurassic) rests in thrust-              bedrock bench. Directly beneath is the
This thrust was identified as one among       fault contact atop the youngest (Flysch                 Thick White Limestone Beds Formation
many within a regional system of thrust       Transition Beds Formation, Paleocene).                  (Late Cretaceous), composed of resistant,
faults discovered during the 1:50,000 map-    The Jurassic Chert Series Beds serve as a               sharp weathering, brush- and bush-sur-
ping carried out by Lalechos (1973) and       décollement into which the Lykaion thrust               mounted limestone. In combination with
Papadopoulos (1997).                          soles, which is also the case for most parts            the underlying Thin Platy Limestone Beds
                                              of the Pindos fold and thrust belt (Degnan              Formation (Late Cretaceous), the Thick
  In carrying out geological mapping of       and Robertson, 1998; Skourlis and                       White Limestone Beds Formation supports
the sanctuary and its surroundings            Doutsos, 2003). Décollement favorability                the steep imposing cliffs that mark the
(1:2500-scale), I expanded the four-unit      of the Chert Series Beds derives from its               west and north faces of Mount Lykaion.
Pindos Group stratigraphy of Lalechos         inherent quasi-plastic mechanical                       Moreover, the Thick White Limestone
(1973) and Papadopoulos (1997) into the                                                               Beds Formation has been heavily attacked
                                                                                                      by karst processes as revealed in the more
                                                                                                      than 150 sinkholes within its map-area
                                                                                                      distribution of just 10 km2. Today it is dif-
                                                                                                      ficult to overstate the impenetrability of
                                                                                                      some of this karst-modified terrain where
                                                                                                      not agriculturally terraced.

                                                                                                        The cone-shaped, smooth-weathering
                                                                                                      klippe landscape above the thrust is much
                                                                                                      different from that below because of the
                                                                                                      presence of relatively soft sandstones of
                                                                                                      the First Flysch Beds Formation (early
                                                                                                      Late Cretaceous) and the mudstones and
                                                                                                      radiolarian chert layers of the Chert Series
                                                                                                      Beds Formations (Jurassic) (see Fig. 5).
                                                                                                      Normal faults conspicuously cut and offset
                                                                                                      the bedrock within the klippe (see Figs. 2
                                                                                                      and 5), and this faulting has had a particu-
                                                                                                      larly profound effect on the landscape
                                                                                                      character of the top of the klippe (Davis,
                                                                                                      2009). The normal faulting postdates the
                                                                                                      late Cretaceous to Eocene folding and
                                                                                                      thrusting. The clearest expression of this
                                                                                                      faulting marks the eastern margin of the
                                                                                                      Agios Elias klippe, where major, active,
                                                                                                      east-dipping, NNE-striking normal faults
                                                                                                      of the “Zeus” active fault system have cut
                                                                                                      into the plateau-like upper surface of the
                                                                                                      Agios Elias klippe, producing structural
                                                                                                      platforms that step down to the east. The
                                                                                                      edge is so precipitous that rock falls are
                                                                                                      frequent, and a very large landslide com-
                                                                                                      plex has accrued on the eastern flank of
                                                                                                      the klippe (see Figs. 2 and 5). Closely asso-
                                                                                                      ciated with the trace of this normal fault

6 GSA Today | December 2017
   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11