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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 31, No. 2, October 1988. Pages 10-11.

Abstract: Rift Offsets-Gulf of Suez, Egypt

By

Ron Nelson and T. L. Patton*

Structure and stratigraphic mapping in the northern half of the Gulf of Suez (GOS) documents two en echelon, rift-parallel (Clysmic trend) rift segments. The segments are right stepping and share a zone of overlap which extends southward from the southern border of the Wadi Araba structure on the western shore of the Gulf, to the north end of the Abu Durba Previous HitblockTop on the east side of the Gulf. The spatial relationship of the two segments defines the central GOS rift offset, and the structural depression linking the segments in the area of overlap forms a rift-offset zone.

Within the rift-offset zone, surface and subsurface data record a variety of structural trends, with two being dominant: the Clysmic trend and a north-northeast trend. Bimodal fault populations with similar orientations relative to the rift axis are found in better exposed, right-stepping rift offsets (e.g., Rhinegraben, Rio Grande rift) and document the departure from the dominantly plane strain of rift segments oriented perpendicular to the extension direction to three-dimensional strain in rift segments oriented obliquely to the extension direction. The left-lateral component of slip documented on some of the oblique-trending faults in the central GOS offset (e.g., Abu Durba-Araba fault) is kinematically consistent with motion across a right-stepping rift offset. Formation of the structural offset zone may have been contemporaneous with the normal segments it joins or a relatively late feature due to linking of adjacent propagating segments.

Recognition of offset zones and their associated fault fabrics is essential for effective exploration of riff basins. For example, the alignment of producing fields and elongation directions of individual fields in the central GOS offset are anomalous relative to those of other producing trends in the Gulf.

End_Pages 10 and 11---------------

Footnote:

* Gulf of Suez Petroleum Company, Cairo, Egypt

 

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