Pre-, syn-, and post-imbrication deformation of carbonate slices along the southern Quebec Appalachian front – implications for hydrocarbon exploration

2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 543-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan Séjourné ◽  
Michel Malo

Thrust-imbricated shelf-carbonate slices form a wide but poorly understood part of the southernmost Quebec Appalachian structural front. Comprehensive structural analysis of two slices exposed at surface, the Saint-Dominique and Philipsburg slices, shows that pre- and post-imbrication structures are important in defining the final architecture of the slices. The dominant structural style is characterized by thrusts and associated asymmetrical folds, tear faults, oblique ramps and incipient backthrusts developed during WNW–ESE shortening. A forward-breaking (piggy-back) sequence of thrusting is recognised, as well as minor out-of-sequence thrusting. The complexity and diversity of contractional structures is directly influenced by lithology (bed thickness and shale content). Bedding-parallel slip planes are important in the concentration (activation and reactivation) of deformation, in that there are the loci for veining, faulting, and folding. Recognition of lithostructural units provides guidelines for the identification of sub-seismic-scale structural traps in subsurface investigations. Extensional structures (normal faults, veins, tension gashes) are found within all carbonate slices, as well as within the footwall of their basal thrusts. Only a few pre-imbrication normal faults have been identified, one of which is a growth fault. Post-imbrication extensional structures are linked with strain relaxation after overthrusting. A widespread front-parallel strike-slip faulting event postdates all other structural features and can have a major impact on the compartmentalization of potential hydrocarbon reservoirs.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riccardo Inama ◽  
Niccolò Menegoni ◽  
Cesare Perotti

<p>Carbonate rocks are among the most important targets for hydrocarbon exploration, and are considered of particular interest also for gas storage and carbon dioxide sequestration. The development of complex fracture networks in carbonates have a significant influence in fluid circulation, enhancing porosity and permeability and, therefore, modifying their storage capacity. The middle-Triassic Lastoni di Formin platform (Italian Dolomites) was studied by combining field measurements and photogrammetric techniques. The reconstruction of the Digital Model of the buildup allowed the analysis at the outcrop scale with a resolution of 5-10 cm, and gave the opportunity to focus on the behavior of sub-seismic (<10 m) structural elements. Even though their influence on the reservoir quality has been documented, heterogeneities of this order of dimensions are considered as part of the matrix properties in reservoir modeling: outcrop analogues represents a very good source of data that can help to fill this resolution gap. Many generations of fractures and faults can be distinguished at seismic and sub-seismic scale in the present-day fracture pattern of Lastoni di Formin, that is the result of different successive deformational events. In particular, the outcrop records the presence of two different tectonic phases: an E-W extension (Jurassic), that generate N-S trending joints and normal faults, and the Alpine compression (Neogene), that forms conjugate strike slip faults and flower structures. Moreover, an early fracturing gravitational event can be observed: is represented by opening-mode fractures and extensional faults sub-orthogonal to the direction of progradation of the buildup. The presence of platform-derived materials (oncoids) in the fracture fills allows to time-constrain the genesis of these fractures shortly after the deposition. Bed-perpendicular diffuse fractures, which are often strata-bound or terminate on bed-parallel stilolythes, were also detected. Both the margin-parallel early fractures and the Jurassic structures underwent strike-slip reactivations during the Alpine orogeny, which indicates a N-S to NNW-SSE shortening. Evidence of these movements can be inferred from riedel structures, en-chelon arrays, splays and fault jogs that can be observed at different scale. Reactivation of early structures can indicate that they influenced the distribution of subsequent faults and fractures affecting the platform.</p><p> </p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rudra Mohan Pradhan ◽  
Tapas Kumar Biswal

<p>Fractured rock aquifers are one of the most difficult aquifers to characterize due to complex geometry and fracture network. In Aravalli terranes of North Gujarat, communities depend on basement rock aquifers as the primary source of water supply. The hydrogeology of these aquifers is poorly understood and the drinking/irrigation wells are frequently placed in this area with little appreciation of the fracture systems. Increasing water demand puts stress to explore groundwater from less reliable sources of basement rocks and hence, makes it vital to identify potential hydrogeological zones. Lineament studies are commonly used for targeting groundwater bearing zones in hard rock terrane and very often ignore the other important structural settings viz. extension, transtension etc. For the present study, structural data pertaining faults and fractures have been mapped through fieldwork and Electrical resistivity imaging (ERT) technique. The key objective of the study is to correlate the structural features (extensional and transtensional settings) with geophysical profiles and to find out potential hydrogeological zones from where water can be explored economically. The study area comes under the Ambaji basin of Aravalli-Delhi fold belt which is a Proterozoic fold belt running 700-800 km in NE-SW direction and situated in NW India. The Aravalli-Delhi fold belt had undergone multiple phases of deformation. In this area, three major sets of fractures are present and are oriented largely in WNW-ESE, NE-SW, and NW-SE direction. The WNW-ESE fracture is dextral in nature which has interpreted from the displacement of fold limbs. Further, these are right lateral en-echelon normal faults where NE-SW extension has been taken place. There is another set of fracture i.e. NW-SE which is due to stretching of strike-slip fault. The ductile shear zones in the area are also parallel to the NW-SE fracture set. The shear zones are opened-up due to extension and formed potential aquifers. ERT has been carried out along and across the fractures to understand the subsurface fracture geometry. The ERT shows deep sited fractures and low resistivity values at the cross-section of WNW-ESE faults with the shear zone. This concludes a strong correlation between different structural settings with potential aquifers which could be used for pumping as well as artificial recharge sites for long term sustainability.</p><p><strong>Keywords-</strong> Aravalli terrane, Aquifer, Extension, Fracture, ERT</p>


1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 344 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Etheridge ◽  
J.C. Branson ◽  
P.G. Stuart-Smith

The Bass, Gippsland and Otway Basins of southeastern Australia were initiated by north-northeast to south- southwest lithospheric extension, largely during the Early Cretaceous. The extensional stage was followed by a Late Cretaceous to Pliocene thermal subsidence stage and a late stage of compressional tectonic overprinting.The extensional stage was dominated by two orthogonal fault sets - shallow to moderately dipping, rotational, normal faults and steeply dipping, transfer (transform) faults. Thermal subsidence involved vertical rather than horizontal movements, and consequently generated a discrete fault geometry, comprising steep, down-to-basin, normal faults with small displacements. The major extensional structures exerted a range of controls on both sedimentation and structuring during the subsidence stage. Likewise, the location and style of late Tertiary compressional structures overprinted on the Gippsland and, to a lesser extent, Bass and Otway Basins are controlled by reactivation of major early normal and transfer faults. In particular, the Kingfish, Mackerel, Halibut, Flounder and Tuna fields in the Gippsland Basin overlie a single Early Cretaceous transfer fault zone that was a basinwide structural boundary during extension. These fields occupy en echelon compressional structures generated by left-lateral wrench reactivation of the transfer zone during late Tertiary northwest-southeast compression. The major extensional structures have had an important influence on all stages of the evolution of these basins. It is contended that a thorough understanding of their extensional framework is an important factor in hydrocarbon exploration of these and other basins.


2006 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
James A Braid ◽  
J Brendan Murphy

The Silurian – Early Devonian Arisaig Group of the Avalon terrane in northern mainland Nova Scotia consists mainly of thinly bedded sandstones, siltstones, and shales deposited in a near shore environment. These strata were deformed in the middle Devonian to form regional northeast- to NNE-trending folds and record deformation processes in the shallow crust during the Acadian orogeny, one of the most regionally extensive orogenic events in the Canadian Appalachians. Structural features in the Arisaig Group are consistent with fold propagation associated with thrust fault geometry and coeval local extension recorded by a set of conjugate normal faults. Many outcrop-scale folds have sheared limbs and show evidence of a complex progressive deformation. Folding was predominantly accomplished by bulk rotation and flattening above thrust fault tips. Early structures (D1–D2) produced regional cylindrical folds, whereas later (D3a, D3b, D3c) structures produced conical folds. D1–D3 fold orientations show high variability, but are consistent with progressive deformation related to reactivation and coeval dextral strike-slip movement along the Hollow Fault. The style of deformation is compatible with models in which strain is partitioned into preexisting shear zones in the basement, with folds in the overlying Arisaig Group initiated above the tips of upward-propagating thrusts as second-order structures related to movement along those shear zones. Taken together, these data indicate that fold mechanisms and geometry in the shallow crust during the Acadian orogeny in mainland Nova Scotia may be related to dextral strike-slip along major faults in the basement and co-genetic upward-propagating thrusts that rotated and flattened overlying strata.


2016 ◽  
Vol 153 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 1166-1191 ◽  
Author(s):  
KENN-MING YANG ◽  
RUEY-JUIN RAU ◽  
HAO-YUN CHANG ◽  
CHING-YUN HSIEH ◽  
HSIN-HSIU TING ◽  
...  

AbstractIn the foreland area of western Taiwan, some of the pre-orogenic basement-involved normal faults were reactivated during the subsequent compressional tectonics. The main purpose of this paper is to investigate the role played by the pre-existing normal faults in the recent tectonics of western Taiwan. In NW Taiwan, reactivated normal faults with a strike-slip component have developed by linkage of reactivated single pre-existing normal faults in the foreland basin and acted as transverse structures for low-angle thrusts in the outer fold-and-thrust belt. In the later stage of their development, the transverse structures were thrusted and appear underneath the low-angle thrusts or became tear faults in the inner fold-and-thrust belt. In SW Taiwan, where the foreland basin is lacking normal fault reactivation, the pre-existing normal faults passively acted as ramp for the low-angle thrusts in the inner fold-and-thrust belt. Some of the active faults in western Taiwan may also be related to reactivated normal faults with right-lateral slip component. Some main earthquake shocks related to either strike-slip or thrust fault plane solution occurred on reactivated normal faults, implying a relationship between the pre-existing normal fault and the triggering of the recent major earthquakes. Along-strike contrast in structural style of normal fault reactivation gives rise to different characteristics of the deformation front for different parts of the foreland area in western Taiwan. Variations in the degree of normal fault reactivation also provide some insights into the way the crust embedding the pre-existing normal faults deformed in response to orogenic contraction.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (9) ◽  
pp. 1764-1777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Malo ◽  
Jacques Béland

At the southern margin of the Cambro-Ordovician Humber Zone in the Quebec Appalachians, on Gaspé Peninsula, three structural units of Middle Ordovician to Middle Devonian cover rocks of the Gaspé Belt are in large part bounded by long, straight longitudinal faults. In one of these units, the Aroostook–Percé anticlinorium, several structural features, which can be ascribed to Acadian deformation, are controlled by three subparallel, dextral, strike-slip longitudinal faults: Grande Rivière, Grand Pabos, and Rivière Garin. These faults follow bands of intense deformation, contrasting with the mildly to moderately deformed intervals that separate them.Most of the structural features observed – rotated oblique folds and cleavage, subsidiary Riedel and tension faults, and offsets of markers – can be integrated in a model of strike-slip tectonics that operated in ductile–brittle conditions. A late increment of deformation in the form of conjugate cleavages and minor faults is restricted to the bands of high strain. An anticlockwise transection of the synfolding cleavage in relation to the oblique hinges may be a feature of the rotational deformation.The combined dextral strike slip that can be measured within the three major longitudinal fault zones amounts to 138 km, to which can be added 17 km of ductile movement in the intervals, for a total of 155 km.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
marco cardinale ◽  
Gaetano Di Achille ◽  
David A.Vaz

<p>Orbital data from the Messenger spacecraft (1) reveal that part of the Mercury surface is covered by smooth plains, which are interpreted to be flood volcanic material across the planetary surface (2). In this work, we present a detailed geo-structural map of the northern smooth plains between<span class="Apple-converted-space">  </span>latitudes 29°N and 65°N. Our 1:100.000-scale map is obtained semi-automatically, using an algorithm to map all scarps from a DEM (3,4) followed by visual inspection and classification in ArcGIS. We created a DEM<span class="Apple-converted-space">  </span>using the raw MLA (Mercury Laser Altimeter) data (1) ,with 500 m/pix, and we used the Mercury Messenger MDIS (Mercury Dual Imaging System) (1,2) base map with 166m per pixel for the classification stage. With this approach, we mapped and characterized 51664 features on Mercury, creating a database with several morphometric attributes (e.g. length, azimuth, scarp height) which we will use to study the tectonic evolution of the smooth plains.<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></p> <p>In this way, we classified wrinkle ridges’s scarps, ghost craters, rim craters and central peaks. The morphometric parameters of the wrinkle ridges will<span class="Apple-converted-space">  </span>be quantitatively analyzed, in order to characterizer the possible tectonic process that could have formed them.</p> <p>This map can be considered an enhancement for the north pole of the global geological map of Mercury (1, 5).</p> <p> </p> <p>References</p> <ul> <li>Hawkins, S. E., III, et al. (2007), The Mercury Dual Imaging System on the MESSENGER spacecraft, Space Sci. Rev., 131, 247–338..<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></li> <li>Denevi, B. W., et al. (2013), The distribution and origin of smooth plains on Mercury, J. Geophys. Res. Planets, 118, 891–907, doi:10.1002/jgre.20075.</li> <li>Alegre Vaz, D. (2011). Analysis of a Thaumasia Planum rift through automatic mapping and strain characterization of normal faults. Planetary and Space Science, 59(11-12), 1210–1221. doi:10.1016/j.pss.2010.07.008 .</li> <li>Vaz, D. A., Spagnuolo, M. G., & Silvestro, S. (2014). Morphometric and geometric characterization of normal faults on Mars. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 401, 83–94. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2014.05.022.</li> <li>Kinczyk, M. J., Prockter, L., Byrne, P., Denevi, B., Buczkowski, D., Ostrach, L., & Miller, E. (2019, September). The First Global Geological Map of Mercury. In <em>EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2019</em> (Vol. 2019, pp. EPSC-DPS2019).</li> </ul>


1983 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 813-829
Author(s):  
P. Yi-Fa Huang ◽  
N. N. Biswas

abstract This paper describes the characteristics of the Rampart seismic zone by means of the aftershock sequence of the Rampart earthquake (ML = 6.8) which occurred in central Alaska on 29 October 1968. The magnitudes of the aftershocks ranged from about 1.6 to 4.4 which yielded a b value of 0.96 ± 0.09. The locations of the aftershocks outline a NNE-SSW trending aftershock zone about 50 km long which coincides with the offset of the Kaltag fault from the Victoria Creek fault. The rupture zone dips steeply (≈80°) to the west and extends from the surface to a depth of about 10 km. Fault plane solutions for a group of selected aftershocks, which occurred over a period of 22 days after the main shock, show simultaneous occurrences of strike-slip and normal faults. A comparison of the trends in seismicity between the neighboring areas shows that the Rampart seismic zone lies outside the area of underthrusting of the lithospheric plate in southcentral and central Alaska. The seismic zone outlined by the aftershock sequence appears to represent the formation of an intraplate fracture caused by regional northwest compression.


2004 ◽  
Vol 141 (5) ◽  
pp. 565-572 ◽  
Author(s):  
YUVAL BARTOV ◽  
AMIR SAGY

A newly discovered active small-scale pull-apart (Mor structure), located in the western part of the Dead Sea Basin, shows recent basin-parallel extension and strike-slip faulting, and offers a rare view of pull-apart internal structure. The Mor structure is bounded by N–S-trending strike-slip faults, and cross-cut by low-angle, E–W-trending normal faults. The geometry of this pull-apart suggests that displacement between the two stepped N–S strike-slip faults of the Mor structure is transferred by the extension associated with the normal faults. The continuing deformation in this structure is evident by the observation of at least three deformation episodes between 50 ka and present. The calculated sinistral slip-rate is 3.5 mm/yr over the last 30 000 years. This slip rate indicates that the Mor structure overlies the currently most active strike-slip fault within the western border of the Dead Sea pull-apart. The Mor structure is an example of a small pull-apart basin developed within a larger pull-apart. This type of hierarchy in pull-apart structures is an indication for their ongoing evolution.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 459-494
Author(s):  
L. Giambiagi ◽  
S. Spagnotto ◽  
S. M. Moreiras ◽  
G. Gómez ◽  
E. Stahlschmidt ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Cacheuta sub-basin of the Triassic Cuyo Basin is an example of rift basin inversion contemporaneous to the advance of the Andean thrust front, during the Plio-Quaternary. This basin is one of the most important sedimentary basins in a much larger Triassic NNW-trending depositional system along the southwestern margin of the Pangea supercontinent. The amount and structural style of inversion is provided in this paper by three-dimensional insights into the relationship between inversion of rift-related structures and spatial variations in late Cenozoic stress fields. The Plio-Quaternary stress field exhibits important N–S variations in the foreland area of the Southern Central Andes, between 33 and 34° S, with a southward gradually change from pure compression with σ1 and σ2 being horizontal, to a strike-slip type stress field with σ2 being vertical. We present a 3-D approach for studying the tectonic inversion of the sub-basin master fault associated with strike-slip/reverse to strike-slip faulting stress regimes. We suggest that the inversion of Triassic extensional structures, striking NNW to WNW, occurred during the Plio–Pleistocene in those areas with strike-slip/reverse to strike-slip faulting stress regime, while in the reverse faulting stress regime domain, they remain fossilized. Our example demonstrates the impact of the stress regime on the reactivation pattern along the faults.


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