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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
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The interaction of three factors results in several different predictable patterns of wrench-fault
-related petroleum traps: (1) the evolutionary stage or magnitude of the wrench faulting; (2) the configurations of the laterally moving plates and their orientations to regional movement vectors; and (3) the structural response of the deformed terrane. In the more common fold and
fault
responses small strike-slip displacements develop narrow trends of en echelon anticlinal culminations which straddle an incipient or underlying wrench
fault
. Traps commonly are structurally complex. Wrenches with intermediate strike-slip displacement have offset-truncated half-fold culminations and structural bowings closed upplunge by the wrench
fault
, and less complex intact en echelon antic
inal-culmination traps away from the
fault
. Folds adjacent to many large-displacement wrench faults often are adversely disrupted structurally, or deeply eroded. Potential hydrocarbon traps form downstructure where basinward-plunging en echelon folds cross sedimentary wedges associated with basin margins, and where large anticlinal culminations are preserved.
Fault
responses to wrenching deformation result in various patterns of en echelon
fault
traps. Degrees of regional-plate convergence or divergence enhance compressive or extensional structuring, respectively, and further modify prospective structures.
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