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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
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Edited By Authors:
Published |
| Coward, M., and S. Stewart, 1995, Salt-influenced structures in the Mesozoic-Tertiary cover of the southern North Sea, U.K., in Jackson, M. P. A., D. G. Roberts, and S. Snelson, eds., Salt tectonics: a global perspective: AAPG Memoir 65, p. 229-250. | ||||||||||||
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Chapter
10
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Rifting initiated during
the Triassic and allowed reactive and locally passive diapirs to develop
in the postsalt cover. In the southern North Sea, the Dowsing graben system
in the cover is offset from the Dowsing fault zone below the salt. This
offset in extensional structures probably relates to the salt thickness
and to the position of the surface hinge line that controlled the onset
of gravity gliding in the postsalt section. Gravity gliding of the cover
into the Triassic-Jurassic Sole Pit trough and away from zones of rift
flank uplift was associated with Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous extension
in the Central North Sea; gliding caused asymmetric compressional pillows
to develop downslope. Gravity spreading of the cover during the Late Cretaceous-early
Tertiary was associated with tilting during thermal subsidence of the southern
North Sea Basin, enhanced by pulses of tectonic inversion in the southern
North Sea basement. The resultant glide tectonics formed new small grabens
upslope and compressional pillows downslope. Where the compressional pillows
were eroded sufficiently or faulted later, the salt broke through the thinned
cover to produce new active and then passive diapirs, which drained the
pillows to produce new rim synclines. | ||||||||||||
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