학술논문

Analogue models of salt diapirs and seismic interpretation in the Nordkapp Basin, Norway
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Petroleum Geoscience. 1(2):185-192
Subject
29A|Economic geology - energy sources
20|Geophysics - applied (geophysical surveys & methods)
analog simulation
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
diapirs
en echelon faults
Europe
extension tectonics
faults
geometry
geophysical methods
geophysical profiles
geophysical surveys
interpretation
Mesozoic
models
Nordkapp Basin
Norway
petroleum
petroleum exploration
salt tectonics
Scandinavia
seismic methods
seismic profiles
seismic stratigraphy
subsidence
surveys
tectonics
Triassic
Western Europe
Language
English
ISSN
1354-0793
Abstract
Dynamically scaled analogue models with an overburden of cohesive sand and a viscous "salt" layer were deformed in a centrifuge to mimic real salt structures in the Nordkapp Basin. Like their natural prototypes, model diapirs were aligned in rows parallel to the basin margins. In profile, model diapirs were asymmetric, suggesting that the real diapirs will possess asymmetric geometries. Like many of the real salt structures, model diapirs pierced without developing a pillow stage because they rose along basin margin faults which propagated up through the overburden from the basement during thick-skinned extension. Once their overburden was weakened by faulting, differential loading forced model diapirs to rise as long as buoyant material was supplied. Some real salt diapirs initially rose as conformable pillows during the early Triassic, became diapiric during middle Triassic and spread broad overhangs during slow sedimentation in late Triassic and Jurassic times. Later, the overhangs reactivated asymmetrically when buried by Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments.