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Preā€salt rift morphology controls salt tectonics in the Campos Basin, offshore SE Brazil

Authors :
Christopher A.-L. Jackson
Leonardo Muniz Pichel
Claiton Marlon dos Santos Scherer
Francyne Bochi do Amarante
Juliano Kuchle
Source :
Basin Research. 33:2837-2861
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Classic models of gravity-driven salt tectonics commonly depict kinematically-linked zones of overburden deformation, characterised by updip extension and downdip contraction, separated by a weakly deformed zone associated with downdip translation above a relatively smooth base-salt surface. We use 2D and 3D seismic reflection and borehole data from the south-central Campos Basin to show that these models fail to adequately capture the complex range of structural styles forming during salt-detached gravity-driven deformation above a rugose base-salt surface. In the Campos Basin the base-salt is defined by broadly NE-trending, margin-parallel, generally seaward-dipping ramps that have up to 2 km of structural relief. We define three domains of overburden deformation: an updip extensional domain, an intermediate multiphase domain, and a downdip contractional domain. The multiphase domain is defined by large, partly fault-bounded, ramp-syncline basins, the stratigraphic record of which suggest c. 28 km of seaward gravity-driven translation of salt and its overburden since the end of the Albian. We also identify three main types of salt structures in the multiphase domain: (i) contractional anticlines that were subjected to later extension and normal faulting; (ii) passive-to-active diapirs that were later extended and widened, and which are bound on their landward margins by landward-dipping, salt-detached normal faults; and (iii) reactive (extensional) diapirs that were subsequently squeezed. We argue that this multiphase deformation occurs because of basinward translation of salt and its overburden over complex base-salt relief, consistent with the predictions of physical models and several other seismic reflection data-based studies. Critically, these complex local strains overprint margin-scale patterns of deformation.

Details

ISSN :
13652117 and 0950091X
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Basin Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ef756dff1266e1e1bd8fc74ecec9aa5d