Abstract

Fissure-fill networks are a widely recognized, but relatively little described, near-surface phenomenon (<1–2 km) hosted in carbonate and crystalline basement rocks below regional unconformities. Faults and fractures in otherwise tight Devonian carbonate basement rocks of the Tor Bay region, Devon, SW England are associated with the development of millimetre- to decametre-wide fissures containing red-coloured early Permian sedimentary material, vuggy calcite mineralization and wall rock collapse breccia. These features preserve evidence about the style and history of fault deformation and reactivation in near-surface settings and on fluid-related processes, such as elutriation and/or mineralization. Field observations, palaeostress analysis and fracture topology analyses show that the rift-related faults and fractures created a network of long-lived open cavities during the development of the Portland–Wight Basin in the early Permian. Once formed, they were subjected to episodic, probably seismically induced, fluid fluxing events and local karstification. The large, well-connected networks of naturally propped fractures were (and possibly still are) important fluid migration pathways within otherwise low-permeability host rocks. These structures are probably equivalent to those observed in many other rift-related, near-surface tectonic settings and suggest that the Tor Bay outcrops can be used as a global analogue for sub-unconformity open fissure systems hosted in low-permeability basement rocks.Supplementary material: Appendix A is available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5023103

Highlights

  • We describe here in detail the nature and significance of fissure systems filled with sedimentary material, breccia and calcitedominated mineral deposits hosted in fractured Devonian limestones cropping out on the western onshore flanks of the offshore Portland–Wight Basin in Tor Bay, SW England (Fig. 2)

  • We examine the diverse architecture of these fissure fills and their associations with rift-related normal faults, the nature and mechanisms of filling and discuss the significance of our findings for fluid flow and fluid reservoir development in the subsurface

  • Chaotic breccia fills up to several metres wide are found in many sediment-filled fissures around Tor Bay

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Summary

Introduction

We describe here in detail the nature and significance of fissure systems filled with sedimentary material, breccia and calcitedominated mineral deposits hosted in fractured Devonian limestones cropping out on the western onshore flanks of the offshore Portland–Wight Basin in Tor Bay, SW England (Fig. 2). Chaotic breccia fills up to several metres wide are found in many sediment-filled fissures around Tor Bay. The most common type consists of irregularly oriented, angular clasts of wall rock limestone that show no evidence of attrition or rounding (e.g. Figs 4a, c, 7b and 11c).

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