Evolution of
Fault
-Related Folds in the Contractional Toe of the Deepwater Niger Delta*
By
Scot W. Krueger1 and Neil T. Grant2
Search and Discovery Article #40201 (2006)
Posted July 18, 2006
*Oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, April 9-12, 2006
Click to view presentation in PDF format.
1ConocoPhillips, Houston, TX ([email protected])
2ConocoPhillips (UK) Ltd, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Abstract
The toe thrust
belt of the deepwater Niger Delta is an ideal natural laboratory for studying
the evolution of contractional folds. The belt typically consists of an
in-sequence set of 10 to 20
fault
-fold structures. While the majority of the
structures are forward verging, there are local domains dominated by
backthrusting and a frontal wedge. The structures are predominantly
fault
-propagation folds, with hints of initial break thrusting out of early
low-relief buckles. Detailed reconstructions of the western belt suggest that
the timing of progressive initiation of motion on the basal detachment is
strongly linked to the timing of onset of highly elevated fluid pressures near
the fracture gradient. These elevated pressures are driven by disequilibrium
undercompaction in response to rapid burial by the advancing delta.
Detailed analysis
of the growth history of several
fault
-propagation folds suggests that once
initiated they propagate rapidly to near their ultimate length. Subsequent
deformation increases the
fault
slip and structural relief without significant
increase in length. In the waning stages of growth, deformation frequently
retreats to localized deformation near the structural culminations, while the
extremities are successively abandoned. It is proposed that this pattern of
growth is being driven by lateral pressure transfer (centroid effects) within
the interbedded sands. Pressures are elevated above the background shale
pressure near the structural crest and suppressed at depth. This has the
mechanical effect of weakening the shales near the top of the fold and
strengthening the shales near the tip line of the
fault
. Such a driving
mechanism could explain both the increasing resistance to lateral tip
propagation after initial rapid growth and the late retreat of deformation to
the crest of the structures.
Selected Figures
Conclusions
-
The deepwater Niger Delta is an ideal natural laboratory for studying the evolution of
fault
-related
folds. -
Folds form through rapid lateral propagation followed by a period of more sluggish growth.
-
Folds die by abandonment of the outer fringes and retreat to the structural crest.
-
Much of the growth history can be explained in terms of the evolution of pore pressure.