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Sequence Variability in Rift Basins: Controls and Products

GAWTHORPE, ROB; IAN SHARP, JOHN UNDERHILL and SANJEEV GUPTA

Within rift basins, rates of subsidence/uplift and the style of defommation show marked spatial and temporal variability around propagating nommal faults. Such variations exert an important control on accommodation, physiography and sediment supply, and in tum affect sequence development.

Sequence variability in rift basins can be linked to Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone evolution. Two-dimensional dip sections across normal Previous HitfaultNext Hit zones display two main styles of deformation during Previous HitfaultNext Hit growth: initial monoclinal growth folding above a buried Previous HitfaultNext Hit tip, followed by a phase of more localized displacement once the Previous HitfaultNext Hit breaks surface. The folding phase leads to stratal convergence towards the Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone, with marked truncation along downshift surfaces. Tightening of the monocline leads to progressive rotation of sequences. Low rates of subsidence during the folding phase mean that accommodation is dominated by sea-level change.

In contrast, once the Previous HitfaultNext Hit breaks surface, development of the monocline stops and higher rates of subsidence become localized against the Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone. As a result, stratal surfaces diverge towards the Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone and stacking patterns are predominantly aggradational. During this phase of evolution, high subsidence rates significantly modify the effects of sea-level fall.

As Previous HitfaultNext Hit displacement increases, so does Previous HitfaultNext Hit length. Thus, in the third dimension, folding and associated convergent stratal packages form at Previous HitfaultNext Hit tips, whereas divergent stratal packages develop towards the centrer of Previous HitfaultNext Hit segments were the Previous HitfaultTop has already broken surface. The implications for sequence development are clear - major along-strike variations in sequence evolution should be expected. 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91021©1997 AAPG Annual Convention, Dallas, Texas.