--> Analogue Modelling of Inverted Domino-Style Basement Fault Systems
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AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition

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Analogue Modelling of Inverted Domino-Style Previous HitBasementNext Hit Previous HitFaultNext Hit Systems

Abstract

Inversion of pre-existing extensional Previous HitfaultNext Hit systems is common in rifts and passive margins and significantly influences the development of hydrocarbon traps. Scaled two-dimensional sandbox models were used to investigate the geometric, kinematic and strain evolution of inversion structures developed above reactivated domino-style Previous HitbasementNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit systems. Progressive model deformation was monitored using high-resolution time-lapse photography and digital image correlation (DIC) techniques. The resultant detailed strain and particle displacement analyses highlighted reactivated Previous HitfaultNext Hit evolution as well as hangingwall deformation Previous HitpatternsNext Hit and enabled the development of new evolutionary models for inverted Previous HitbasementNext Hit-involved extensional faults. Inversion of domino-style Previous HitfaultNext Hit systems produced characteristic syn-rift harpoon geometries, asymmetric contractional Previous HitfaultNext Hit-propagation folds and footwall shortcut faults as the Previous HitbasementNext Hit faults were progressively back-rotated. The pre-existing extensional Previous HitfaultNext Hit architectures, Previous HitbasementNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit geometries, and the relative hangingwall and footwall Previous HitblockNext Hit rotations exerted fundamental controls on the inversion styles. The model results compare well with natural examples of inversion structures associated with reactivated domino-style Previous HitfaultNext Hit systems observed in seismic data. DIC strain monitoring illustrated complex vertical Previous HitfaultNext Hit segmentation and linkage during inversion as the major faults were reactivated and strain was progressively transferred onto footwall shortcut faults. The mechanical stratigraphy of the cover sequences strongly influenced fold and fracture development and the propagation, vertical linkage, and strain histories of the reactivated faults. Detailed particle displacement analysis indicated that progressive hangingwall deformation during extension and inversion was dominated by a significant component of rotation. Hangingwall shear angle varied according to the relative rotations of the hangingwall and footwall Previous HitblocksNext Hit and progressively decreased during inversion as the Previous HitbasementNext Hit faults were back-rotated. This has important implications for the methodologies used to restore balanced cross-sections involving inversion of rotational Previous HitbasementNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit systems. Comparative geomechanically-based restorations of inverted domino-style faults, which incorporated internal deformation of the Previous HitbasementTop, showed similar deformation mechanisms to the analogue models.