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Abstract

R. Swennen, F. Roure, and J. W. Granath, eds., Deformation, fluid flow, and reservoir appraisal in foreland fold and thrust belts: AAPG Hedberg Series, no. 1, p. 133-156.

Copyright © 2004 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

DOI:101306/1025689H12965

Vein Formation in Cretaceous Carbonates in the Laramide Foreland Fold and Thrust Belt of Eastern Mexico

H. Ferket,1 R. Swennen,2 S. Ortuntildeo-Arzate,3 M. C. Cacas,4 F. Roure5

1Fysico-chemische Geologie, K. U. Leuven, Heverlee, Belgium
2Fysico-chemische Geologie, K. U. Leuven, Heverlee, Belgium
3Instituto Mexicano del Petroacuteleo, Meacutexico D. F., Mexico
4Institut Franccedilais du Peacutetrole, Rueil-Malmaison Cedex, France
5Institut Franccedilais du Peacutetrole, Rueil-Malmaison Cedex, France

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study has been realized thanks to the technical and professional assistance of Pemex, Exploracioacuten y Produccioacuten in the Veracruz district. We are grateful to Miguel Espinoza Nava, Juan Toriz Gama, Luis Ricardo Caraveo Miranda, and Martiacuten Martiacutenez Medrano for their help in organizing the field work in the Cordoba–Veracruz area and for access to data of cores and maps that were necessary to construct the geological map and cross sections of the area. We also warmly thank H. Nijs for the careful thin-section preparation. The constructive and critical comments of Professor Manuel Sintubin (University of Leuven, Belgium) and of the reviewers Gary Gray (Exxon-Mobil) and Joseacute M. Grajales Nishimura (Instituto Mexicano del Petroacuteleo) were greatly appreciated and have helped in improving the manuscript.

ABSTRACT

A structural analysis and petrographic investigation has been performed on veins in Cretaceous carbonates in the Cordoba Platform in eastern Mexico, which is part of the Laramide foreland fold and thrust belt (FFTB). This chapter focuses on the different episodes of vein formation, vein morphology, and possible mechanisms of vein formation. Vein (fracture) formation is interpreted in relation to the kinematic evolution of the FFTB. Evidence for the development of hydrofractures during this evolution is given.

This study documents veins (fractures) related to Laramide FFTB development in the Cordoba Platform. These veins (fractures) are related to the kinematic evolution of the area and the inferred paleostress conditions. The kinematic evolution can be split up into three major stages: a precompression phase with platform development; a Laramide compressional stage, during which the FFTB developed; and finally, a late Basin and Range-related extension phase.

Compound veins and densely spaced microveins record multiple fracturing events in a cyclic stress field during burial, most probably caused by changes in fluid pressure. They are interpreted in relation with early foreland flexuring. With rising compressional stress, less well-oriented veins and breccia veins develop because of a lowered differential stress in the prefolding stage. Progressive layer-parallel shortening (LPS) leads to a caterpillar-type scenario of fluid migration toward the foreland, eventually causing hydrofracturing, succeeded by pressure solution and development of vertical stylolitic planes. These LPS stylolites have the potential to be reopened during subsequent folding of the strata. In addition, older LPS-parallel planes and extrados fractures may open in anticlinal hinges. Shear-associated, shallow-dipping veins develop after LPS development, possibly because of bedding-parallel shear and/or thrust migration. Other post-LPS veins are steeply dipping and commonly reuse older vein orientations. Dark, banded veins, which are filled with a silt-sized and clay-sized material and lack significant cementation, are interpreted to reflect fracture planes along which recrystallization of matrix occurred. Many post-LPS dissolution-enlarged veins and breccias relate to telogenetic karstification. Post-LPS multiple brecciation just above a major thrust plane in the buried tectonic front area is interpreted to reflect the damage zone of that fault.

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