--> Abstract: Structural Evolution of the Eyan Salt Body, Offshore Gabon, by Katie Milroy; #90078 (2008)
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Structural Evolution of the Eyan Previous HitSaltNext Hit Body, Offshore Gabon

Katie Milroy
Royal Holloway, Aberdeen, United Kingdom

The North Gabon sub-basin, offshore West Africa is an early Cretaceous rift basin overlain by Aptian post rift evaporites and a thick succession of Upper Cretaceous-Tertiary drift sediments which Previous HitleadNext Hit to the development of complex Previous HitsaltNext Hit structures such as the Eyan Previous HitsaltNext Hit body.

The Eyan Previous HitsaltNext Hit structure is a composite of several structural styles. This includes two linear Previous HitsaltNext Hit walls, a Previous HitsaltNext Hit stock reaching the present day sea floor and an allochthonous plug fed extrusion, onto which a secondary minibasin has developed.

The results from 3D seismic interpretation show the occurrence of synkinematic growth packages. These sequences thicken into the underlying autochthonous Previous HitsaltNext Hit and thin onto the flanks of structures, suggesting the early establishment of upright Previous HitsaltNext Hit bodies, and minibasin subsidence. Stacked halokinetic sequences, flanking the structure record a complex history of passive diapirism. This is recorded by varying onlap relationships and angular unconformities; a Previous HitfunctionNext Hit of the relative rates of Previous HitsaltNext Hit rise, sediment accumulation and Previous HitsaltNext Hit withdrawal. These relationships show an intricate history of vertical Previous HitsaltNext Hit growth, expansion and reduction across the Eyan structure.

Previous HitTimeNext Hit thickness maps demonstrate the changing pattern of depocentres, Previous HitsaltNext Hit withdrawal and Previous HitsaltNext Hit growth through Previous HittimeNext Hit and together, with evidence from vertical seismic in the overburden, record a history of early Previous HitsaltNext Hit mobilisation, periods of tectonic quiescence followed by further Previous HitsaltNext Hit growth. A network of ridges and intersecting diapirs has developed over Previous HittimeNext Hit which bares particular resemblance to analogue modelling experiments carried out by Rowan & Vendeville (2006).

 

AAPG Search and Discover Article #90078©2008 AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas