Rob L. Gawthorpe1,
John R. Underhill2,
Ian Sharp3,
Ian Carr1,
Mike Young1,
Aileen McLeod2
(1) The University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom
(2) Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
(3) Norsk Hydro ASA, Bergen, Norway
Abstract: Fault array evolution as a control on syn-rift stratigraphy and play development: examples from the Gulf of Suez and North Sea
Field data from the
exceptionally-exposed, Oligo-Miocene Suez rift, Egypt, and interpretation of
well-constrained 3D seismic data from the Late Jurassic of the North Sea
illustrate the interplay between fault array development, landscape evolution
and syn-rift stratigraphy. The development of fault arrays is characterised by
three main phases: i) an initiation phase
characterised by isolated segments,
ii) a stage where fault growth and interaction are dominant, and iii) a final
stage characterised by major crustal-scale fault blocks. Each
phase
has a
distinctive stratigraphic response and sequence architecture.
Depocentres in the initiation
phase
are isolated growth synclines, a few kilometres long and up to 2 km wide,
located in the hangingwalls of blind fault segments. At this stage sequences
are dominated by non-marine and shallow marine facies and are strongly
influenced by growth folding above propagating faults. During the interaction
phase
some depocentres enlarge by segment linkage, while others become
inactive. Relay ramps become the loci for coarse-grained sediment input along
border fault zones. Due to propagation and linkage of fault segments, the locus
of maximum displacement migrates, which strongly affects the temporal and
spatial development of coarse-grained facies. By the localisation
phase
, major
crustal-scale fault-blocks are dominant physiographic features, and deformation
is focused on border faults. Major sequence variation around these fault-blocks
is related to spatial variations in subsidence and uplift.
Reconstructing the propagation and linkage history of normal fault segments can increase predictive capability for subtle stratigraphic plays in rifts in general.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90914©2000 AAPG Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana