4.6 Article

Low-Angle Normal Faults on the NW Shelf of Australia: Implications for Late Paleozoic Rifting

Journal

TECTONICS
Volume 41, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021TC007088

Keywords

low-angle normal fault; Late Paleozoic rifting; intrabasement reflection; hyper-extended continental margin; metamorphic core complex; NW Shelf of Australia

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41902123]
  2. China Postdoc Science Foundation [2020T130619]
  3. Fault Dynamics Research Group, Royal Holloway University of London

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In this study, high-resolution seismic data and well data are integrated to investigate the structural style and characteristics of the Mermaid fault system in the Late Paleozoic rifting of the NW Shelf of Australia. The fault is a large-scale, low-angle normal fault that formed through rotation and extension from early high-angle normal faulting.
Late Paleozoic rifting of the NW Shelf of Australia formed a wide basin that fundamentally controlled the Mesozoic continental rifting and passive margin development; however, structural style associated with this extensional process remains poorly constrained. Here, we integrate high-resolution seismic data with well data from the proximal domain of the NW Shelf to show that the Mermaid fault system in the eastern Dampier Sub-basin is a large-scale (similar to 80 km long), low-angle (5-20 degrees) normal fault with up to 10 km offset formed during the Late Paleozoic rifting. In its northern and southern domains, the Mermaid fault has a planar geometry with characteristic extensional structures. In its central domain, seaward-dipping, domino-style normal faults in the upper crust extend downward into a highly reflective seismic zone that arches upward to form an elliptical dome. Growth strata in the hangingwall half-graben and footwall basement reflections indicate that the Mermaid fault initiated as a high-angle normal fault and was rotated by footwall exhumation during extension. Intrabasement deformation along and below the Mermaid fault is characterized by moderate- to high-amplitude, semi-continuous seismic reflectors that are distinct from transparent reflection character in the overlying basement unit. Comparison of the Mermaid fault system to well-studied detachment faults in metamorphic core complex settings reveals striking similarities. We therefore suggest that the Mermaid fault developed as part of a nascent metamorphic core complex with a warm to hot footwall that enabled middle-lower crustal flow during the Late Paleozoic continental rifting, likely induced by southward subduction of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean.

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