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Abstract
Chapter from: M
62: Petroleum Basins of South America
Edited by
A. J. Tankard, R. Suarez Soruco, and H. J. WelsinkAuthors:
H. Passalacqua, F. Fernandez, Y Gou, and F. Roure Basin and Aerial Analysis/Evaluation
Published 1995 as
part of Memoir 62
Copyright © 1995 The American Association of Petroleum
Geologists. All Rights Reserved. |
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Crustal
Architecture and Strain Partitioning in the Eastern Venezuelan Ranges
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H. Passalacqua
F. Fernandez
Intevep, S.A.
Caracas, Venezuela
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Y. Gou
Beicip
Cedex, France
F. Roure
IFP
Cedex, France
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Abstract
The eastern
Venezuelan Coast Ranges result from oblique convergence along the South
American-Caribbean plate boundary, expressed at the surface by the El Pilar
dextral strike-slip fault. A crustal-scale, balanced NNW-SSE cross section
has been constructed across this major transfer zone that links oceanic
subduction of the Lesser Antilles with continental subduction of the Andes.
It shows a major discrepancy between the cover and basement lengths, which
can be explained by tectonic inheritance from the Tethyan margin and an
initially thinned crust and basement tilted blocks. The section, interpreted
down to the Moho, is constrained by magnetic and gravimetric profiles.
A major gravimetric low along the axis of the Maturín basin shows
the progressive northward deepening of the Moho. Positive magnetic anomalies
on the southern flank of this basin probably result from shallow basaltic
intrusions along the thinned part of the paleomargin or from crustal heterogeneities.
A high-density intracrustal wedge is needed to fit the gravimetric high
north of the Serranía; the solution requires a deep crustal root
beneath the belt and a northward-dipping South American Moho. The results
of successive gravimetric and magnetic modeling studies are compared with
the present-day seismicity of the South American-Caribbean plate boundary.
Shallow seismicity is restricted to the eastern part of the El Pilar fault,
whereas deep focal mechanisms pick out a northwestward-dipping subduction
slab off the northeastern Venezuelan and Trinidad coasts.
A consistent geodynamic model
involving northward-dipping subduction of at least 70 km of South American
continental lithosphere is thus proposed for the area. The El Pilar fault
is a shallow structure that branches at depth on an intracrustal backstop
and at the surface transfers the lateral motion required to balance the
northward-dipping subduction in an oblique convergence regime. Petroleum
generation was initiated in the early stages of the flexural evolution
of the eastern Venezuelan basin, and early generated oils migrated over
long distances from the inner parts of the belt toward the Orinoco to fill
the traps of the Faja Petrolífera. Tectonic overburial also induced
a late stage petroleum generation, with shorter migration of oil toward
the frontal structures (the El Furrial and Orocual trends). |
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