Kinematics
of the propagation and growth of normal faults: implication for petroleum
geology
Catherine Baudon, 3D Lab, Earth, Ocean and Planetary Sciences department, Cardiff University, Wales, U.K., [email protected]
Detailed fieldwork and recent improvements in both numerical studies and seismic data have led to the development of several different models for the kinematic evolution (initiation, propagation, linkage) of normal faults that can be divided into two general categories. One suggests that a single isolated fault grows by radial propagation in a scale-invariant manner as the slip increases, with no migration of the point of nucleation. The second model explains the growth of faults by linkage of initially isolated faults that propagate towards each other, overlap and subsequently link.
This project aims to test these models and understand the mechanics and kinematics of fault growth in a range of different structural and depositional contexts.
In order to
address this problem, geometrical
and displacement
analysis
have been carried
out using 3D seismic datasets from the offshore Nile Delta (
analysis
of faults in a range of structural contexts allows us to assess
the fault geometry and length, fault zone thickness, throw, tip
gradients and gross morphology of linkage structures. A simple
geometrical
approach based on expansion index, cumulative and incremental throw was used to
define the fault growth histories.
A field analogue
study carried out on small-scale relay structures located in the