Reactivation and Fault
Activity Mapping of the Late Cretaceous Sequence in
Abu Roash Area, North Western Desert, Egypt
By
Sh. M. Sakran1
(1) Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt
The detailed structural analyses of fault
zone characteristics and other
reactivation criteria in the Late Cretaceous sequence of Abu Roash area
unraveled the reactivation history of this geologically important sector. The
NE-SW trending major faults acted as a southern marginal
fault
zone to the
Natrun Basin in the north during Late Cretaceous sedimentation. Changes in
distribution and nature of deformation products within the zones of these faults
suggest syn-sedimentary Late Cretaceous movement was dip slip and normal. A
later most probably Santonian phase of dextral transpression is also indicated.
Syn-sedimentary
fault
deformation of the hangingwall sediments increases towards
the major NE-SW trending faults. The
fault
zone characteristics of these minor
faults revealed both distributed and localized shearing. Thrust movement
overprinted the older hangingwall minor synthetic extensional faults. The common
NW-SE, N-S, and ENE-WSW faults have no evidence of syn-sedimentary pre-
Santonian movement and are interpreted as the echo of Late Santonian dextral
transpression and the associated basin inversion.