--> ABSTRACT: Fault Geometries and Location in Sedimentary Cover During Basement-Controlled Deformation: An Experimental Investigation, by Bruno Vendeville; #91032 (2010)
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Previous HitFaultNext Hit Geometries and Location in Sedimentary Cover During Previous HitBasementNext Hit-Controlled Deformation: An Experimental Investigation

Bruno Vendeville

Recent regional seismic and field investigations in the North Sea and the Gulf of Suez have shown that extension is partly controlled by reactivation of inherited Previous HitbasementNext Hit structures and their upward propagation into the overlying sedimentary rocks. Previous HitBasementNext Hit control is expected to induce complex Previous HitfaultNext Hit Previous HitpatternsNext Hit into the sedimentary cover, especially if it includes weak stratigraphic horizons such as evaporites, marls, or shales.

Relations between Previous HitbasementNext Hit and cover Previous HitfaultNext Hit geometries have been studied using scaled analog experiments and synthetic seismograms, which were compared with field and seismic data. Experiments were conducted for different dips of the Previous HitbasementNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit and for a variety of rheological behaviors of the sedimentary sequence, ranging from purely ductile to entirely brittle. Ductile rocks were modeled using perfectly fluid silicone putty; dry sand simulated brittle layers.

Experimental results show that both reverse and normal faults may occur, and that Previous HitfaultNext Hit location, orientation, and development strongly depend on the rheology of the sedimentary cover. Previous HitBasementNext Hit-induced extension of a brittle cover induces transient high-angle reverse faults and late normal faults which both root into the Previous HitbasementNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit at depth. Models with a ductile layer at the Previous HitbasementNext Hit-cover interface show a permanent reverse Previous HitfaultNext Hit above the Previous HitbasementNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit, a basinward tilted Previous HitblockNext Hit, and a rear graben structure located in the uplifted Previous HitblockNext Hit.

The geometry of transfer zones has also been investigated using 3-D models of interaction between tear faults and Previous HitbasementTop faults. Models show the development of arcuate structures and point out the influence of lateral boundary effects on the orientation of shallow normal and reverse faults.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91032©1988 Mediterranean Basins Conference and Exhibition, Nice, France, 25-28 September 1988.