3D Structural Controls of Contractional Fault
-Related Folds on the
Patterns of Growth Stratigraphy in Passive Margins: Examples from the Deep-Water
Niger Delta
Freddy Corredor1, John Shaw2, Chris
Guzofski1, and Frank Bilotti3
1 Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
2 Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
3 Unocal Corporation, Sugar Land, TX
Contractional fault
-related folds that accommodate the gravity-driven
extension from the shelf often control the patterns of growth stratigraphy in
the deep-water regions of passive margins. In the deep-water Niger Delta we
observe
fault
-related folds that grow by multiple mechanisms including kink-band
migration and limb rotation, and that in many cases present distinctive patterns
of growth stratigraphy. In
fault
-related folds that grow by kink-band migration,
growth strata deposited along the base of backlimbs are incorporated over the
fold limbs with increasing shortening and fold growth. For instance, as the fold
grows, channelized systems that drain along the base of backlimbs are translated
to a higher position along the fold. In the case of
fault
-related folds that
grow by limb rotation, the growth strata deposited along the base of backlimbs
are stacked vertically along the axial surface that limits the base of the limbs
as no new material is added to the fold with continuous shortening and growth.
Thus, it is of critical importance to understand and predict the contractional
fault
-related fold kinematics in passive margins in order to understand the
regional distribution of potential clastic reservoirs for petroleum exploration
in these settings. We used seismic amplitudes extracted from a 3D seismic volume
across multiple pre-growth and growth horizons from a
fault
-related fold in the
deep-water Niger Delta to constraint the 3D structural sequential restoration of
this structure. Combined mechanisms of kink-band migration and limb rotation are
invoked to explain the three dimensional kinematics of this
fault
-related fold
in the deep-water Niger Delta.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90039©2005 AAPG Calgary, Alberta, June 16-19, 2005