basin types according to tectonic basins lie within the continental crust. epicratonic basins lie on...

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BASIN TYPES BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC ACCORDING TO TECTONIC by by Prof. Dr. Prof. Dr. Abbas Abbas Mansour Mansour SEDIMENTARY BASINS

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Page 1: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

BASIN TYPESBASIN TYPESACCORDING TO TECTONICACCORDING TO TECTONIC

bybyProf. Dr. Prof. Dr. AbbasAbbas MansourMansour

SEDIMENTARY BASINS

Page 2: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

B. Convergent plate margins • 10. STABLE CONTINENTAL INTERIOR BASIN• E.g. Lake Eyre Basin • Intracratonic (= within stable continental crustal mass) • Long term stability • Flat topography • River, desert, lake environments & facies• Mature basement derived sed. ± evaporites

Page 3: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins • Simple basins are divisible into two groups.

Intracratonic basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often occur adjacent to one another with little fundamental difference in genesis or fill

• Intracratonic basins are the classic type of sedimentary basin. Notable examples include the Williston, Michigan and Illinois basins of North America, the Maranhao basin of Brazil, and the Murzuk and Kufra

Page 4: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins

Page 5: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins • The Williston basin is the classic example

of an intracratonic basin. It contains some three kilometres of rocks of all periods from Cambrian to Tertiary, with notable gaps only in the Permian and Triassic. Sedimentation spanned a range of environments including fluvial and marine sands, reefal carbonates, evaporites and subwave- base pelagic muds. Deep-sea, turbidite and deltaic fades, igneous activity and shallow syndepositional faulting are all absent.

Page 6: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins

Page 7: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins

Page 8: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins • The lengthy history, diverse facies and

structural simplicity of the Williston basin are also found in the other basins cited as examples of intracratonic basins. It is important to note that the sedimentary facies, though diverse in lithology and environment, are seldom indicative of deep water or abrupt subsidence of the basin floor. Deposition took place close to sea level. Subsidence was thus a gradual, if erratic event, with sedimentation being sufficiently rapid to keep the basin nearly Filled at any point in time.

Page 9: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins • Basins of this type are found well within the

present limit of the continental margins, but it is obvious that they were frequently connected to the sea. This is shown by their intermittent phases of marine carbonate and evaporite sedimentation. During these periods they might, therefore, be more truly termed embayments rather than basins.

Page 10: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins • Modem analogues include the Hudson Bay

and the Baltic Sea, which lie on the Canadian and Scandinavian shields respectively. Intermittent uplift of the open rim of the embayment closes the basin off from oceanic influence. Evaporite or continental sedimentation follows. An interesting example of this is provided by the Murzuk basin of Libya.

Page 11: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins • An interesting example of this is provided by

the Murzuk basin of Libya. The northern rim of this basin was separated from the TethyanOcean by the Gargaf arch, a tectonic feature which controlled deposition through much of Palaeozoic and Mesozoic time. Nevertheless, palacocurrent analysis of fluvial Cambro-Ordovician and Mesozoic strata indicate a northerly palacoslope over the Gargaf arch (Fig. 140). These data show that the Murzukbasin alternately fluctuated from embayment to basin until attaining its present structurally-closed intracratonic basin shape.

Page 12: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Intracratonic Basins

Page 13: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Epicratonic basins• Epicratonic basins are those which lie on the

edge of continental crust. Though subcircularin plan, by definition, they tend to be embayed and open towards the adjacent ocean basin. The axis of an epicratonic basin may plunge to the floor of the ocean or be interrupted by a sill-like feature at the rim of the continental margin. Examples of epicratonic basins include those of the Mississippi Gulf coast, the Niger basin and the Sirte basin of North Africa

Page 14: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Epicratonic basins• The Mississippi and Niger basins are very

similar. Both originated towards the end of the Mesozoic and continued to be sites of active sedimentation until the present day.

• Both basins contain a basal layer of salt, which diapirically intrudes younger sedimentary rocks. The Louann salt of the Gulf basin is of Jurassic age. The basal salt of the Niger basin is believed to be of Albian-Aptian age (Mascle et at., 1973).

Page 15: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Epicratonic basins• The basins are infilled by prisms of terrigenous

elastics which were deposited in a range of environments. On the landward sides of the embayments alluvial deposits predominate. These pass basinward into diverse shoreline facies, which include both barrier and deltaic deposits. These thin and grade seawards into marine slope muds, with some development of turbidite sand facies at the base of the slope. Geo- physical data suggest a gradual seaward thinning of the continental crust beneath both the Mississippi Gulf coast and Niger basins

Page 16: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Epicratonic basins• The Sirte basin of North Africa shares many

features with the Gulf coast and Niger basins. It too is essentially an embayment which opens out to an oceanic basin (the Mediterranean). The Sirte basin originated in the end of the Cretaceous and was infilled more or less continuously throughout the Tertiary.

Page 17: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Epicratonic basins• By contrast with the previous, two examples, the Sirte

basin was predominantly a site of carbonate sedimentation. Basal sands and thin evaporites are overlain by deep-water Upper Cretaceous and Palaeocene shales. These are thickest in intrabasinal troughs, while reefal carbonates were deposited on adjacent horsts. Throughout the Eocene the Sirte embayment was infilled by nearly a kilometre of interbedded carbonates and evaporites. The final phase of basin infilling during the Oligocene and Miocene involved terrigenous and carbonate sedimentation in both marine and continental environments. The active history of the basin was concluded by a bout of basaltic volcanism in the Pleistocene.

Page 18: BASIN TYPES ACCORDING TO TECTONIC basins lie within the continental crust. Epicratonic basins lie on continental crust but are partially open to an ocean basin. These two types often

Comparison between both types• These brief reviews of three epicratonic basins show

how they differ from the previously described intracratonic examples. Epicratonic basins tend to be much less stable than intracratonic ones, due to their situation at continent margins. Initial basin subsidence can be rapid, resulting in an early phase of deep-water sedimentation. The floor of the Sirte basin was extensively faulted and there was some igneous activity. Like intracratonic basins, however, epicratonic embayments can be infilled by both carbonates and terrigenous sediment. This differentiation is a function of the degree of uplift of the adjacent crust.