OLSON, CHRISTOPHER C., Texas A&M University, Department of Geology and Geophysics, College Station, TX
ABSTRACT: Styles and Significance of Structural Inversion Across the Nam Con Son
Basin
, Offshore of SE Vietnam
The Nam Con Son
Basin
is part of a Tertiary rift
basin
complex located
offshore of SE Vietnam. Early to middle Miocene regional contraction was accommodated
along the eastern margin of the western Nam Con Son sub-
basin
through reactivation of
west-dipping, N-S striking, extensional and transtensional faults. Inversion in the
Western Nam Con Son subbasin occurred at the same time as the most intense phase of
basin
inversion in the West Natuna
Basin
to the southwest. Inverted faults in both basins
closely follow the strike of the western side of the Natuna Arch, suggesting that the
Natuna Arch served as a rigid buttress that concentrated stress and deflected strain.
The eastern and western Nam Con Son sub-basins are, separated by a N-S trending
fault-bounded basement high that, apparently controlled structural differences between the
subbasins.
Basin
inversion in the western sub-
basin
was accommodated through reactivation
of the main
basin
-bounding faults which resulted in gentle asymmetric folding of the lower
to, middle Miocene post-rift section. Inversion in the eastern sub-
basin
, however, is
limited to middle Miocene time, and is characterized by highly selective reactivation of
synthetic and antithetic faults that amplified pre-existing rollover in the hangingwall.
The Vietnam Shear Zone defines the eastern margin of the Nam Con Son
Basin
and represents
a major transpressional high that accommodated most of the strike-slip displacement
associated with opening of the South China Sea, during middle Miocene time. In contrast,
very little strike-slip deformation occurred in the eastern sub-
basin
during the middle,
Miocene, and accordingly, only minor inversion structures developed.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90909©2000 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid