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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
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Collapse faulting is found circumscribing
salt
-withdrawal basins in the south Louisiana
salt
-
dome
province. The
salt
-withdrawal basins are the result of unusually large volumes of
salt
vacating a restricted area of the source
salt
bed to form peripheral
salt
intrusions. Such localized
salt
-withdrawal basins are not known in the upper Gulf Coast or interior
salt
basin because the
salt
intrusions in those areas are of smaller volume and more widely dispersed. In the lower Gulf Coast, areas are found where large intrusions of
salt
have occurred,
salt
domes are found clustered, or a
salt
ridge of extraordinarily large mass has risen. An abnormally steep-sided basin is associated with the unusually large intrusions of
salt
.
The sedimentary rocks overlying the
salt
-withdrawal area have collapsed periodically as
salt
was withdrawn and moved toward the surface at the periphery of the withdrawal area. The sedimentary collapse caused normal faulting parallel with, and on, the flanks of the newly initiated basin structure. The faulting, when viewed in cross section, tends to assume a conical configuration nearly conforming to the cross-sectional outline of the basin. These faults are referred to as collapse faults.
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