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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 68 (1984)

Issue: 4. (April)

First Page: 503

Last Page: 503

Title: Comparison of Basin Types in Active and Ancient Strike-Slip Zones: ABSTRACT

Author(s): Paul Mann, Dwight Bradley

Abstract:

Hydrocarbon exploration in strike-slip zones requires awareness of several distinct basin types, traditionally defined on the basis of bounding Previous HitfaultNext Hit geometry: pull-aparts (P), Previous HitfaultNext Hit-wedge basins (W), Previous HitfaultNext Hit-angle basins (A), Previous HitfaultNext Hit-flank basins (F), and ramp valleys (R). We compare the characteristics and frequency of these basin types in an active (40 post-Eocene basins of the northern and southern Caribbean) and ancient (19 Late Devonian-Carboniferous basins of the northern Appalachians) strike-slip setting. Pull-apart basins, which lengthen and deepen at Previous HitfaultNext Hit discontinuities with increased strike-slip offset, constitute the best studied and most numerous basin type. Other recognizable basin types are less numerous and often shorter lived than pull-aparts, and this may eflect: (1) their role as precursory structures prior to concentration of strike-slip displacement on a single Previous HitfaultNext Hit; (2) their role as interference structures at random Previous HitfaultTop junctures; and (3) the unlikelihood of preservation because of thinner sedimentary fill. Several disrupted basins of complex or unknown origin (D) appear to have initiated as pull-aparts and subsequently to have been been offset into halves or modified into compressional ramp valleys. Using observations from active basins, several geologic criteria for distinguishing compressional vs. extensional origin of reactivated ancient basins are discussed.

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