Sa. Stewart et Jd. Argent, Relationship between polarity of extensional fault arrays and presence of detachments, J STRUC GEO, 22(6), 2000, pp. 693-711
Extensional fault arrays are often dominated by a single fault vergence, fo
rming 'domino' fault blocks. The polarity of faults can be defined as synth
etic or antithetic in relation to the overall shear sense across the fault
system. Observations of the geometry of a number of held examples of extens
ional fault arrays vs, the lithologies (as a proxy for strength profile) sh
ow that synthetic extensional arrays from the North Sea and Bristol Channel
Basin detach on salt layers, whereas examples of antithetic arrays from th
e North Sea are found to pin out downwards and no basal detachment is prese
nt. In the Sacramento Mountains core complex of the Basin and Range, the ma
jor low-angle detachment fault post-dates antithetic shears that evolved at
midcrustal level and are preserved in the granitic footwall. These antithe
tic shears were cut by the main low-angle detachment, whose hanging wall di
sintegrated into an array of synthetic faults. The kinematics of synthetic
vs. antithetic arrays dictate that faults within synthetic arrays must bran
ch onto a basal detachment, whereas faults within antithetic arrays may die
out downwards. Therefore, the results emphasise that fault polarity in dom
ino arrays may be related to the boundary conditions of the fault blocks an
d therefore may be diagnostic of the strength profile of the faulted strati
graphy. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.