Fold and Thrust Belts: Structural Style, Evolution and Exploration
The outer parts of collision mountain belts are commonly represented by fold and thrust belts. Major advances in understanding these tectonic settings have arisen from regional studies that integrate diverse geological information in quests to find and produce hydrocarbons. Drilling has provided tests of subsurface forecasts, challenging interpretation strategies and structural models. This volume contains 19 papers that illustrate a diversity of methods and approaches together with case studies from Europe, the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region. Collectively they show that appreciating diversity is key for developing better interpretations of complex geological structures in the subsurface – endeavours that span applications beyond the development of hydrocarbons.
Structure and kinematics of the Central Sivas Basin (Turkey): salt deposition and tectonics in an evolving fold-and-thrust belt
-
Published:April 14, 2020
-
CiteCitation
Etienne Legeay, Jean-Claude Ringenbach, Charlie Kergaravat, Alexandre Pichat, Geoffroy Mohn, Jaume Vergés, Kaan Sevki Kavak, Jean-Paul Callot, 2020. "Structure and kinematics of the Central Sivas Basin (Turkey): salt deposition and tectonics in an evolving fold-and-thrust belt", Fold and Thrust Belts: Structural Style, Evolution and Exploration, J. A. Hammerstein, R. Di Cuia, M. A. Cottam, G. Zamora, R. W. H. Butler
Download citation file:
- Share
Abstract
The Sivas Basin in central-eastern Anatolia is a north-verging salt-bearing fold-and-thrust belt including synorogenic salt tectonics. It formed between the northern leading edge of the Taurides platform and the Kırşehir block since Late Cretaceous time. We have constructed five regional cross-sections supported by field data and 2D seismic to constrain the structure of the basin and its evolution. The area is divided into three tectonic domains from south to north: (1) a Maastrichtian to Eocene north-verging fold-and-thrust belt, which terminates by a regional Eocene evaporitic level; (2) an Oligo-Miocene salt domain which contains two generations of minibasins separated by a salt canopy, forming a salt-and-thrust belt; and (3) a late Miocene to present day foreland basin. The cross-sections show the along-strike variations and the increasing shortening in the fold-and-thrust belt from west (c. 15 km) to east (c. 25 km). The thick salt allows for the intracutaneous propagation of the fold-and-thrust belt below a domain of salt withdrawal minibasins, decoupled as the initial salt thickness increases. In that case, the salt domain is thrusted both frontward and backward. Efficient exhumation followed by erosion of the fold-and-thrust resulted in synorogenic salt tectonics in the foreland and thus increased the mechanical resistance between them.
- Anatolia
- Asia
- basin analysis
- basins
- Cenozoic
- chemically precipitated rocks
- Cretaceous
- cross sections
- decollement
- deposition
- Eocene
- erosion
- evaporites
- fold and thrust belts
- foreland basins
- geometry
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- kinematics
- lithostratigraphy
- lower Oligocene
- Maestrichtian
- marine environment
- Mesozoic
- Middle East
- middle Miocene
- middle Oligocene
- Miocene
- Neogene
- obduction
- Oligocene
- Paleocene
- Paleogene
- plate tectonics
- Pliocene
- salt
- salt tectonics
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- style
- surveys
- tectonics
- tectonostratigraphic units
- Tertiary
- Turkey
- Upper Cretaceous
- upper Eocene
- upper Miocene
- Sivas Basin
- Kizilirmak River basin