Abstract

AbstractSheath folds recognized on kilometer scale are rare and only described in salt tectonics in seismic data. Here, we present mega‐sheath folds spectacularly imaged in a 3‐D seismic survey in the seismic basement flooring the hyperextended Liwan subbasin in the northern margin of the South China Sea. The sheath folds show eye structures delimited by anastomosing discontinuities. The axial planes of the sheath folds are subparallel to a rift‐related, extensional detachment surface separating hyperextended seismic basement from the syn‐rift sedimentary sequence. The sheath folds as well as the anastomosing discontinuities formed during hyperextension by ductile shearing of the forearc inherited and prestructured metasediments. The ductile shearing eventually resulted in the metasediments derived from midcrust unroofed at the footwall of an extension detachment fault. The discovery of mega‐sheath folds and ductile deformation within the basement conflicts with the general assumption that hyperextended domains are in the brittle field. The new seismic observations show the importance of forearc inherited, prestructured anisotropic basement controlling the crustal rheology during hyperextension.

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