Abstract

The Central Basin platform (CBP) of west Texas is composed of six structural blocks, which moved independently during the Ouachita orogeny. As the South American plate collided with North America the Wasson uplift on the northwestern shelf of the Permian basin acted as a buttress against which the CBP was compressed. Shear forces transmitted through the crust resulted in buckling, uplifting, and faulting of the greater CBP. Although the platform is dominated by vertical movement, it did not however, uplift as a single tectonic unit. Rather, it splintered into six megablocks, which moved simultaneously along oblique-slip fault systems. A tectonic model for formation of the CBP is useful for predicting the orientation and spacing of fault systems. The three structurally highest blocks on the CBP, the Eunice high, the Sand Hills high, and the Fort Stockton uplift, show three distinct positive gravity and magnetic anomalies. These county-sized blocks (35 x 80 km) share similar characteristics: (1) they are bounded by strike-slip faults that involve basement uplift; (2) they have maximum structural deformation along their margins where bends in the strike-slip fault system enhance compressions; and (3) their oil is trapped in high-angle fault structures (R-shears ) along the clock boundaries,more » but toward the center of the blocks, oil tends to accumulate at unconformity and fold traps. Strike-slip fault systems in west Texas are subtle, with only about 3-7 km of offset and commonly may be overlooked. However, detailed regional mapping indicates that these individual fault segments are parts of through-going systems, which are distributed in logical patterns based upon models for strike-slip tectonics.« less

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