4.7 Article

On the structures of Abu Roash area and inverted basins of northern Egypt- Comments on Surface expression of the Syrian arc Kattaniya inverted basin in the Abu Roash area, northeast Western Desert, Egypt: Structural style and tectonic history by Sayed et al. (2020)

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 142, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105261

Keywords

Abu Roash Cretaceous outcrop; Kattaniya inverted basin; Northern Egypt Inverted basins; Syrian arc; Western Desert of Egypt; Wrench structures

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The paper presents a detailed structural mapping of the Abu Roash Cretaceous outcrop and discusses the relationship between folds and faults in the mapped area. It also highlights the unique structural deformation of the Abu Roash area compared to the northern Egypt inverted basins. The main-bounding fault of the Kattaniya basin is found to be located away from the Abu Roash outcrop.
The paper by Sayed et al.2020 presents detailed structural mapping of the Abu Roash Cretaceous outcrop (SW of Cairo) and integrates the mapping results with the tectonic evolution of the Kattaniya basin as one of the northern Egypt inverted basins. I present in this discussion a different age relationship between the folds and faults in the mapped area, where folds form after faults as push-up structures and faults form after folds as tear faults. I also comment on the relationship between the structural deformation of Abu Roash area and the deformation of the Kattaniya basin as the dextral wrenching of Abu Roash area is unique and does not represent the deformation of the northern Egypt inverted basins. Wrenching at Abu Roash formed a push-up structure at a stepover between ENE oriented faults whereas inversion in northern Egypt reactivated NE-SW oriented faults with predominant reverse slip and subordinate strike-slip. The main-bounding fault of Kattaniya basin is not located at Abu Roash outcrop but lies ~35 km to the NW. Basin inversion in northern Egypt continued to post-Early Miocene time, not earlier as suggested by Sayed et al. Other comments on Sayed et al.'s mapping are also highlighted.

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