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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGISTS
Distinguished Lecture Series
Abstract: Pressured Shale and Related Sediment Deformation -
Mechanism for Development of Regional
Contemporaneous Faults
By
Regional contemporaneous faults of the Texas coastal area are formed on the seaward
flanks of deeply buried linear shale masses characterized by low bulk density
and high fluid pressure. From seismic data these masses, commonly tens of miles in
length, have been observed to range in size up to 25 miles in width and 10,000 feet
vertically. These features, aligned subparallel with the coast, represent residual
masses of undercompacted sediment between sand-shale depo-axes in which greater
compaction has occurred. Most regional contemporaneous fault systems in the Texas
coastal area were formed during times of shoreline regression when periods of fault
development were relatively short, and where comparatively simple down-to-the-basin
fault patterns were formed. In cross-sectional view, faults in these systems
flatten and converge at depth to planes related to fluid pressure and form the seaward
flanks of underlying shale masses. Data indicate that faults formed during times
of shoreline regression were developed primarily through differential compaction of
adjacent sedimentary masses. These faults die out at depth near the depo-axes of
the sand-shale section.
Where subsidence exceeded the rate of deposition, gravitational faults developed
where basinward sea-floor inclination was established in the immediate area of deposition.
Some of these faults became bedding-plane type when the inclination of
basinward-dipping beds equaled the critical slope angle for gravitational slide.
Fault patterns developed in this manner are comparatively complex and consist of
numerous antithetic faults and related rotational blocks.
Conclusions derived from these observations support the concept of regional contemporaneous
fault development through sedimentary processes where thick masses of
shale are present and where deep-seated tectonic effects are minimal.
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