91 12.2 Folding — Physical Geology – 2nd Edition
12.2 Folding
When a body of rock, especially sedimentary rock, is squeezed from the sides by tectonic forces, it is likely to fracture and/or become faulted if it is cold and brittle, or become folded if it is warm enough to behave in a plastic manner.
The nomenclature and geometry of folds are summarized on Figure 12.2.1. An upward fold is called an (or, more accurately, an antiform if we don’t know if the beds have been overturned or not), while a downward fold is called a , (or a synform if we don’t if the beds have been overturned). In many areas it’s common to find a series of antiforms and synforms (as in Figure 12.5), although some sequences of rocks are folded into a single antiform or synform. A plane drawn through the crest of a fold in a series of beds is called the of the fold. The sloping beds on either side of an axial plane are . An antiform or synform is described as if the angles between each of limb and the axial plane are generally similar, and if they are not. If the axial plane is sufficiently tilted that the beds on one side have been tilted past vertical, the fold is known as an antiform or synform.
A very tight fold, in which the limbs are parallel or nearly parallel to one another is called an isoclinal fold (Figure 12.2.2). Isoclinal folds that have been overturned to the extent that their limbs are nearly horizontal are called recumbent folds.
Folds can be of any size, and it’s very common to have smaller folds within larger folds (Figure 12.2.3). Large folds can have wavelengths of tens of kilometers, and very small ones might be visible only under a microscope.
Antiforms are not necessarily, or even typically, expressed as ridges in the terrain, nor synforms as valleys. Folded rocks get eroded just like all other rocks and the topography that results is typically controlled mostly by the resistance of different layers to erosion (Figure 12.2.4).
Figure 12.2.5 shows folding in the same area of the Rocky Mountains as Figure 12.0.1. Describe the types of folds using the appropriate terms from above (symmetrical, asymmetrical, isoclinal, overturned, recumbent etc.). You might find it useful to first sketch in the axial planes.
See Appendix 3 for Exercise 12.1 answers.
Media Attributions
- Figures 12.2.1, 12.2.2, 12.2.4, 12.2.5: © Steven Earle. CC BY.
- 12.2.3: Colorado Geological Survey