Normal Fault Population Evolution and Stratigraphic Response: An Example from the Hammam Faraun Fault Block, Suez Rift, Egypt
By
Rob Gawthorpe1, Ian Sharp2, Adel R Moustafa3, Chris Jackson1, Chris Leppard1, Mike Young1
(1) University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom (2) Norsk Hydro ASA, Bergen, Norway (3) Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
The evolution and linkage of fault segments to form continuous,
basin-bounding normal fault zones is recognised as a first-order control on the
size, shape and stratigraphy of sedimentary basins within areas of continental
extension. We present results of an integrated structural and sedimentological
study of the late Oligocene-Recent evolution of the Hammam Faraun fault block,
Suez rift that allows the temporal evolution of fault populations to be
investigated. Initial fault activity was distributed across the fault block on
short (1-4 km long), low
displacement
(<1 km) segments, with most faults
attaining their maximum length soon after the onset of rifting. Over the first
6-8 Myr of rifting, these initial segments either linked to form longer,
segmented fault zones, or became inactive and died. Following this rift
initiation phase,
displacement
became progressively localised onto >25 km long
border fault zones bounding the fault block and many of the early intra-block
fault zones became inactive. The locus of fault activity continued to migrate
following linkage, with post Middle Miocene
displacement
focused on the western
margin of the fault block. The dynamics of fault population evolution
illustrated here are comparable to those suggested by analogue and numerical
modelling studies and have important implications for the tectono-stratigraphic
evolution of rifts and for understanding complex and often subtle syn-rift plays
and structural compartmentalization of major fault blocks.