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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: The Paradox of
Minibasin
Subsidence into Salt
Minibasin
Subsidence into Salt
Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of
Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin
Why do salt-floored minibasins subside? An almost universal
explanation is that salt is forced from beneath the sinking
basin by the weight of its sedimentary fill. This explanation is
valid if the average density of the basin fill exceeds that of salt,
which needs at least 1,600 meters of siliciclastic fill to ensure
enough compaction. However, most minibasins start sinking
when the fill is much thinner than this. Some mechanisms other
than density inversion must explain the early subsidence history
of these minibasins. Conventional understanding of
minibasin
subsidence is thus incomplete.
We identify five alternatives to density-driven subsidence of
minibasins. During diapir shortening, the squeezed diapirs inflate,
leaving the intervening minibasins as bathymetric depressions.
In extensional diapir fall, stretching of a diapir causes it to sag,
producing a
minibasin
above its subsiding crest. During decay of
salt topography, a dynamic salt bulge subsides as upward flow of
salt slows, which lowers the salt surface below the regional sediment
surface. During sedimentary topographic loading, sediments
accumulate as a bathymetric high above salt. Finally, subsalt
deformation affecting the base of salt may produce relief at the
top of salt. Each mechanism (including densitydr
iven subs idence) produces a di f ferent
bathymetry, which interacts with sediment
transport to produce a different facies pattern in
each type of
minibasin
. The particular mechanism
for
minibasin
subsidence depends on the tectonic
environment, regional bathymetry, and sedimentation
rate. The spatial variation of minibasins on
a continental margin creates provinces in which
a given minibas in s tyle i s dominant . An
appreciation of subsidence mechanisms should
thus improve understanding of
minibasin
fill
patterns and allow genetic comparisons between
minibasins.
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