Megaflaps adjacent to salt diapirs

AAPG Bulletin(2016)

Cited 71|Views8
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Abstract
Megaflaps are steep stratal panels that extend far up the sides of diapirs or their equivalent welds. They have multiple-kilometer fold widths and structural relief and are thus distinct from smaller-scale composite halokinetic sequences. Maximum dips range from near-vertical to completely overturned. Although overturned megaflaps are associated with flaring salt, there is no direct link between megaflap formation and the initiation of salt sheets. Strata within a megaflap are usually convergent, and the lower boundary is typically concordant with the top salt. The upper boundary ranges between a prominent onlap surface and a more diffuse zone of gradual rotation and thinning, and growth strata likewise display both onlap and stacked wedge geometries. We use quantitative cross-section restoration to elucidate the origin and development of megaflaps. Megaflaps typically represent the relatively thin roofs of early salt structures that include single-flap active diapirs, passive diapirs, salt pillows, and salt sheets. They develop during halokinetic drape folding as the minibasin sinks, during contractional squeezing of the diapir and its roof, or during some combination of the two. The kinematics are dominated by either limb rotation or kink-band migration, in which roof strata move through a fold hinge into a lengthening steep megaflap. Both restoration results and direct field evidence suggest that internal strain is minor, with little bed lengthening and thinning. Recognition and understanding of megaflaps are critical to successful petroleum exploration of three-way truncation traps against salt. Megaflaps also have implications for the lateral seal of stratigraphic traps and fluid pressures in minibasins.
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Seafloor Spreading
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