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Distortion of the Salt-Cored
Fold
System and
Its Effects upon Abyssal Plain Sedimentary Processes in the Cilicia-Adana
Evaporitic Basin, the NE-Mediterranean*
By
Mustafa Toker1, Vedat Ediger2, And Graham Evans3
Search and Discovery Article #30054 (2008)
Posted February 26, 2008
*Adapted from extended abstract for oral presentation at AAPG and AAPG European Region Energy Conference, Athens, Greece, November 18-21, 2007.
1Istanbul Technical University, Eurasia Institute of Earth Sciences, Ayazağa Campus, 34469 Maslak-Istanbul/Turkey
2Tubitak-MRC, Marmara Research Center, Institute of Earth and Marine Sciences, Gebze-Kocaeli/Turkey
3Imperial College, Department of Geology, London SW7 2BP, England.
The abyssal
plain zones of the evaporitic environments generally provide very attractive
structural targets as the associated salt-cored
fold
trains contain the first
structures out of the basin where hydrocarbons are generated. The Cilicia-Adana
basin contains upper Messinian evaporite interval which has undergone widespread
halokinesis since Pliocene to a recent folding stage. Detailed interpretation of
seismic reflection data was undertaken to gain insight into the formation,
growth, and spatial distribution of salt-cored folds and their distortion by
abyssal-plain sedimentary processes.
The deep-water abyssal plain of the basin underwent gravity-driven compression and contains a large variety of syn/post-sedimentary structures, including folds with different wavelengths-amplitudes and squeezed diapirs, displaying distorted-body styles. The salt-cored folding developed where updip extension was accommodated by downdip compression resulting from basinwide salt detachment, which is interpreted by varying modes of salt-sediment deformation, salt-diapir body distortion, and dating of their growth velocities.
Thickness of laterally migrated salt decreases southward, to the north Cyprus coast. The wavelength of diapirs also decreases southward, and estimated original salt thickness reaches maximum along the central basin graben, where the wavelength sharply increases. We postulate a strong positive relationship between salt thickness, diapir wavelength, and salt-body distortion. Diapirs seem to be spaced at a characteristic wavelength, not directly related to faults, and the wavelength varies smoothly through the area. However, there is a strong alignment of some mature diapirs, parallel to the W-E oblique-slip master fault trend, suggesting that their axis of elongation was controlled by faulting, with the main initial salt movement during early Pliocene, due to basin extension and buoyancy.
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The Cilicia–Adana salt-rich basin, in the NE corner of the Mediterranean, is an arcuate and elongate depocenter nestled between the Kyrenia-Misis Lineament in the SSE and the Taurus Mountains of south Turkey in the north and NW (Figure 1). In the west, the basin is separated from the Antalya Basin by the N-S-trending Anamur-Kormakiti zone (Anastasakis and Kelling, 1991). Thus, it can be viewed as an intra-mountain basin, situated in a forearc setting, north of the Florence Rise and Cyprus Arc and forming the convergent boundary between the African and Aegean-Anatolian plates. The Cilicia-Adana basin is divided into an E-W-trending, deeper abyssal plain and a NE-SW-trending, shallower Adana delta platform margin in the NE. The Adana Basin in the NE is the onshore extension of the central Cilicia Basin (Figure 1). Various aspects of the Cilicia Basin have been investigated by Evans et al. (1978), Aksu et al. (1992a,b), and in a context of circum-Mediterranean basins by Robertson (1998), but its deeper ductile system and halokinetic structure were rather unknown until 2000. The dynamic evolution and structural development of this basin, as well as other basins are affected in many cases by salt tectonism and halokinetic regimes (Toker, 2003) (e.g., offshore west Africa, east Brazil, eastern Canada, Gulf of Mexico). Evaporitic sedimentary systems have been investigated in order to understand the complex sub-systems, such as mechanism of delta-overburden deformation above viscous creep of Messinian substratum of the Cilicia-Adana Basin (Toker et al., 2006). Salt tectonism and halokinesis have occurred on several passive continental margins; for instance, the Gulf of Mexico (Diegel et al., 1995), offshore margins of west Africa (Marton et al., 2000), and the Atlantic Canadian margin (Yassir and Bell, 1994). Sedimentary basins that have experienced salt tectonism are characterized by seaward thinning of sediment layers overlying the salt due to seaward progradation of sediments from adjacent onshore regions. The sediments are characterized by regions of landward extension beneath the shelf and seaward contraction (Tari et al., 2002). Studies that have contributed to the basis for this article and its conceptual framework include:
The
abyssal plain of evaporitic environments (e.g., the Cilician abyssal
plain) generally provide very attractive structural targets as
associated salt-cored
The
filling of accommodation space in a specific time interval shows the
most likely channel paths of turbidite systems, areas of ponded
turbidite deposition, and also the deformation of the sedimentary
sections resulting from salt withdrawal and lateral movement. An
excellent example in a complex salt-sediment body architecture in
the Cilicia-Adana Basin (Figure 1)
illustrates how the
Sediment distribution in the basin indicates two depositional patterns: Messinian evaporites and Plio-Quaternary sediments separated by an abrupt subaerial and strong unconformable erosional surface at the Miocene-Pliocene boundary, termed “Reflector M” by Ryan et al. (1966) and Woodside (1977) (Figures 2, 3A, and 5). We effectively used single channel-sparker seismic reflection data collected during the years of 1972-1977 by R/V Shackleton cruise governed by Graham Evans. Figure 1 shows a track chart of the geophysical survey with the major deltaic and structural provinces. Total length of seismic tracks positioned in the intershelf areas across the basin is approximately 750 km. Most of cruise lines were run perpendicular to the length of the basin (or N-S), while the other surveys were run subparallel or oblique to basin trend (Figure 1). Depth conversions from time sections on seismic data were made by using a sound velocity of 1500 m/s for the sea water and 2000 m/s for the Plio-Quaternary sediments. During the survey, the signal energy of the sparker source and the firing interval varied between 1 and 6 kJ and 1 to 4 ms, respectively, and the frequency range is 80 to 200 Hz.
Salt Mobilization, Salt Emplacement Mechanism, and Sedimentation
House and Pritchett (1994) suggested that the emplacement history of
the salt, consisting of two phases (salt mobilization and salt
deformation), clearly indicates the importance of how salt
emplacement mechanisms developed in the Cilicia region, where Plio-Quaternary
overloading caused salt mobilization/emplacement mechanisms. In the
Cilician basin, much of Plio-Quaternary structural and depositional
framework is controlled by the original primary emplacement and
secondary remobilization of the salt body. The upward movement of
the salt continues as long as it is sourced from a deeper salt body,
which is presumed to be pre-Messinian or older (Miocene “main salt
stocks”). The vertical and horizontal movement of salt has resulted
in the widespread deformation of the basin plain (Figures
2, 3,
4, and 5).
Regional extension occurring after diapir growth has utilized all of
its available source salt. Collapse of the original salt body, which
is considered to have been deeply sourced, resulted from salt
evacuation and created the huge Plio-Quaternary depocenters above
the deeper salt body (Figures 2,
3, and 4).
If delta sedimentation is more rapid than can be
accommodated by fault-
The compensation faults, associated with high
sedimentation rates (“overriding periods”) and upthrown in direction
of sediment supply, often
The deep-water abyssal plain of the basin underwent gravity-driven compression as shown by a large variety of syn/post-sedimentary structures, including folds with different wavelengths-amplitudes and squeezed diapirs, displaying distorted body styles (Figures 2, 3, 4, and 5). The salt-cored folding driven by gravity is where updip extension is accommodated by downdip compression, because of basinwide salt detachment, interpreted by varying modes of salt-sediment deformation, salt-diapir body distortion, and timing of their growth velocities. Geometry and growth kinematics of salt-cored folds show that high-amplitude folds, from their growth histories, can potentially reveal important details of the physical behavior of salt and delta overburden. Because the initial characteristic wavelengths in Figures 3A and 4 are likely to be preserved, sedimentary beds are also easily traceable across the crests of the salt folds (Figures 2, 3, 4, and 5); thus original and/or localized salt thicknesses can be estimated in general terms. Thickness of laterally migrated diapiric salt and the wavelength of diapirs decrease southwards, to the north Cyprus coast above reflector M (Figures 3A, a, and 4), and estimated original salt thickness reaches a maximum along the central basin graben setting where the wavelength sharply increases (Figures 3b and 4). We postulate a strong positive relationship between salt thickness, diapir wavelength, and body distortion (Figures 3, 4, and 5). Diapirs seem to be spaced at a characteristic wavelength, not directly related to faults, and the wavelength varies smoothly through the area. However, there is a strong alignment of some mature diapirs, paralleling the W-E oblique-slip master fault zone (Figures 2, 3A, and 3b), suggesting that their axis of elongation was controlled by faulting (Figure 5). The main initial salt movement was during early Pliocene, due to basin extension and subsequent buoyancy. It is also recognized that there are two frontal boundary conditions in the formation of the body styles of the salt-cored folds: the wedge and the onlap pattern of delta sediment progradation over the salt, as external buttress, and the wedging of salt layer, as internal buttress (Figures 3A [to north], 3c, and 5b). External buttress, more generally characterized by newly formed compressional structures, favors the inversion of extensional structures and results in inaccurate interpretations of halokinetic evolutionary stages.
Diapiric salt waves migrate downslope during gravity gliding and by
the frontal compression of salt-sediment layer wedging (Figures
3A [to north],
3c, and 5b). Seismic data
indicate a better fit of external buttress with the Cilicia basin;
of special interest is the sediment incorporation within the salt
diapiric wave (Figures 3c and
5a, b). In thin-skinned tectonics, a
sediment cover is sheared off from an underlying basement. In some
cases, such detachments are located in salt horizons. During
deformation, faults and narrow anticlinal folds can develop in the
upper cover, showing that
During compression some of the synclines are progressively pinched
and detached, and this gives birth to a typical delta-prograding
wedge pattern and the effect of an external buttress (Figures
3A, c).
Thus, we can identify some structural variations and details in the
resulting geometry of salt-sediment
In
regard to the balance between extension and contraction for the
basin, we infer that thin-skinned salt tectonism is gravitationally
driven and independent of any basement tectonics. These
considerations are also supported by Odonne and Costa, (1993). In
their multilayer paraffin wax model, the
Distortion of the Salt-Cored Folding
The progressive development and evolution of the Cilician salt-cored
· Primary depositional geometry and basin tectonics (Figure 5). · Initial thickness of sedimentation (pre-deformation phase by salt) (Figure 5). · Synchronized sediment rate with upward salt deformation (syn-deformation phase by salt) (Figure 5b).
·
Mother salt stock and feed-back rates. In relation
with these, time relationships between o Synchronization involving the two critical parameters: (i) high sedimentation rate or great supply of sediments and (ii) great rate of diapir growth or great supply of the salt stock. These parameters confirm trapped sedimentary patterns (confinement/entrapment mechanism) in the folded structures. There exists an equilibrium not only between the main salt stock and sediment accumulation rate but also between salt withdrawal compensation (SWC) and sediment accommodation rate (CSL--compensatory sediment loading). Synchronous relationship is mostly due to broadly widening salt-stock chamber in terms of the paleo-topographic structure (M-reflector) supported by a gradient of rapid graben subsidence in the NE abyssal plain (Figure 5). Note in Figure 5b that the diapirs (on the right) are out of the sediment deformation front and undistorted piercement diapirs. They were uplifted recently, after the development of distorted diapirs, which were first to experience the deformation and became asymmetric anticlinal features (Figure 5b). Thus, they represent “synchronization” in the same province, while the others are diachronous (Figures 5a, c). Figures 3c and 5b illustrate synchronous diapir growth, with sediment deformation, indicating syn-diapir infill geometry and wedge-shaped sedimentary packages between salt swells. o Diachronization involving two critical parameters: (i) high sedimentation rate or great supply of sediments and (ii) low rate of the diapir growth or low supply of salt stock. Great supply of sediment cannot trigger synchronous diapir growth or high concentration of diapirism, due to less salt stock. This is controlled by the narrowed chamber of the salt stock within a paleo-topographic depression (reflector M), which is probably due to the oblique-slip master fault zone, with an expected termination and loss of evaporites (Figure 5). Yet, there are several linear and elongate groups of diapirs that migrated westward in a shape similar to that of a paleo-channel system (M-reflector) (Figures 2, 3b, and 5). In this case, the rate of diapir growth and sediment accumulation represent “diachronization,” which is reflected by undistorted crestal patterns and symmetric anticlinal forms (Figures 2, 3a, b, and 5a, c). The illustrated diachronous diapir growth, with regularly ponded, or trapped, sedimentary infill patterns, was controlled by buoyancy and especially differential sediment loading.
Note that in Figure 5 the seismic
profiles are the areal representatives of the distorted/undistorted
folding styles and their locations in the basin paleo-bathymetry at
Reflector M. Consequently, salt-cored folds have formed in recent
times and shaped the present-day basin plain. Seismic profiles show
that the relief observed along the Cilicia basin plain arises mainly
from salt-cored
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