4.5 Article

Normal fault growth and fault-related folding in a salt-influenced rift basin: South Viking Graben, offshore Norway

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 490-506

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsg.2010.02.005

Keywords

Syn-rift; North Sea; Normal faulting; Fault-propagation folding; Salt tectonics

Funding

  1. Statoil

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Three-dimensional seismic data were analysed to reconstruct the structural and stratigraphical development of a salt-Influenced rift basin and thus gain an understanding of the relationships between normal fault growth, salt tectonics and the evolution of syn-rift depocentres. The Sleipner Basin. South Viking Graben, northern North Sea, is ca. 30 km long by 8 km wide and is bound to the east by a major extensional fault zone (Sleipner Fault Zone). Two types of fault-related fold are identified within the basin. (1) A fault-parallel monocline, interpreted as an extensional forced-fold, which formed through the upward propagation of the Sleipner Fault Zone through ductile evaporites of the Zechstein Supergroup and (2) three fault-perpendicular, salt-cored anticlines that compartmentalise the basin Into four sub-basins and are related to displacement gradients along-strike of the Sleipner Fault Zone Detailed seismic-stratigraphic analysis of pre- and syn-rift stratal units reveals a complex interplay between fault growth and salt movement which strongly controlled the evolution of syn-rift depocentres. During the early syn-rift, a series of depocentres, separated along-strike by the fault-perpendicular folds, were offset Into the axis of the basin (ca 3-45 km to the west of the Sleipner Fault Zone) by the fault-propagation fold. Later in the rift event, the influence of the fault-perpendicular folds depleted, resulting in a larger, interconnected depocentre that shifted into the immediate hangingwall of the fault as the surface of the fault-propagation fold was breached The results of this study have implications for normal fault growth and sedimentary depocentre development in salt-influenced rift basins, and contribute to the general understanding of the controls on salt migration. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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