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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Edited By Author:
Published |
Schuster,
D. C., 1995, Deformation of allochthonous salt and evolution of related
salt-structural systems, Eastern Louisiana Gulf Coast, in M. P.
A. Jackson,
D. G. Roberts, and S. Snelson, eds., Salt tectonics: a global perspective: AAPG Memoir 65, p. 177-198. |
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Chapter
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Although both end-member structural systems may originate before loading of allochthonous salt having grossly similar geometry, their final structural configurations after loading and salt withdrawal are distinctly different. Roho systems are characterized by large-displacement, listric, south-dipping growth faults that sole into intra-Tertiary salt welds marked by high-amplitude reflections continuous with residual salt masses. Salt from the former salt tablets has been loaded and squeezed laterally and downdip. Stepped counter-regional systems, in contrast, comprise large salt domes and adjacent large-displacement, north-dipping growth faults that sole into intra-Tertiary salt welds before stepping down again farther north. Within the large salt-withdrawal basins north of the counter-regional faults are south-dipping strata that terminate onto subhorizontal salt welds. Recognition of these more complex, deep-seated salt geometries should be factored into an analysis of hydrocarbon charge, migration, and trapping in light of the strong correlation between oil and salt-structural systems in the Gulf Coast. |
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