Abstract: The Role of Fault
Linkage in Controlling the Architecture
of Syn-rift Sequences, Late Jurassic, Northern North
Sea
DAWERS, NANCYE H., and JOHN R. UNDERHILL, The University of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK; ANKER M. BERGE and KJELL-OVE
HeGER, Norsk Hydro Research Centre, Bergen, Norway; Cai
Puigdefabregas, Centre for Advanced Studies
, Blanes, Girona, Spain.
(nhdawers{@}glg.ed.ac.uk)
The structural evolution of segmented normal faults plays an
important role in controlling the stratigraphic development of rift
basins. This study investigates the role of fault
growth and
linkage in controlling the nature of synrift sequences on the
hangingwall of the Statfjord East
fault
, which represents a typical
Late Jurassic structure of the prolific Brent Province of the
northern North Sea. Well data from Norwegian Blocks 34/7 and 33/9
and detailed 3-D seismic interpretation art used to examine
structural and stratigraphic patterns, both along and across
fault
strike.
The fault
system consists of several en echelon segments, which
define a series of sub-basins in the hangingwall. Distribution and
facies architecture of syn-rift sequences, thickness variations,
and the character of internal reflectors are spatially related to
the sub-basin geometry. Variations in displacement along the
fault
segments exhibit characteristics that are typical of mechanically
interacting en echelon faults, including local displacement minima
and anomalous displacement gradients in regions of segment overlap.
Structural and stratigraphic evidence indicate that the Statfjord
East
fault
evolved by the formation and eventual linkage of
segments, which are progressively younger towards the north.
Fault
evolution is observed to control: 1) shifts in local
depocentres that are attributed to the local enhancement of
displacement rates resulting from segment interaction; 2) the
shoreline migration following segment linkage; and 3)
fault
scarp
degradation, which was most extensive adjacent to the most active
section of the
fault
. Our results imply that knowledge of
fault
geometry and interaction may allow more accurate detection of
subtle, syn-rift reservoirs.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90937©1998 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, Salt Lake City, Utah