Abstract

The sediments that have accumulated in sedimentary basins during geological time represent a load on the lithosphere that should respond by flexure. Simple elastic and viscoelastic (Maxwell) plate models have been used to examine quantitatively the contribution of flexure to basin formation. The models have been used to predict the stratigraphy and gravity anomalies associated with basins for different thermal and loading histories. The predictions of the models have been compared with observed stratigraphy and free-air gravity anomalies from interior and cratonic basins. The best overall fit to the observations is for an elastic plate model in which the flexural strength of the lithosphere increases with age. A similar model has recently been used successfully to explain observations from continental margin basins, oceanic islands and seamounts, and deep-sea trench - outer rise systems. This model explains the increase in the overall width of basins during their evolution as well as the stratigraphy of the basin edges. The apparent decrease in the widths of some basins through time can be explained by the model if sediment deposition is followed by erosion of the basin and its edges. The models results suggest that the flexural properties of continental and oceanic lithosphere are generally similar and that flexure is an important factor to consider in backstripping studies in which the tectonic subsidence of a basin is isolated and stratigraphic studies in which relative changes of sea level are estimated.

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