Abstract

Considering the foreland fold belt of the Salakh Arch in the northern Oman Mountains, predictions made from two-dimensional (2D) restorations and geometrical analyses are tested here to assess the relationship between large-scale folds and small-scale fractures. The Salakh Arch is composed of six anticlines that are interpreted as faulted detachment folds. They have an overall stratigraphy of a 2-km-thick carbonate platform underlain by more than 1.5 km of interbedded sandstone and shale sequences. These sequences are most likely detached on a regionally extensive evaporite horizon. The folding of the Salakh Arch structures most likely occurred during the Neogene Period, and perhaps partly in the early Quaternary Period. This is evident from the thrusting of the Late Neogene Barzaman Formation which was deposited during the Late Neogene Period. Robust outcrop and subsurface fracture data are used to test these predictions. The results from the study indicate that most fractures are related to the orientation of the local structure, with some sets parallel and some sets perpendicular to local hinge lines. Prefolding regional fractures are also widely distributed, and these were mostly formed during the Late Cretaceous Period. Many pre-existing fractures are associated with faults that formed during the Late Cretaceous Period under a NW–SE compression. The local fractures generally have orientations that are consistent with being formed by the flexural slip/flexural flow of fold limbs and tangential longitudinal strains on fold hinges. These structures can be predicted from finite stratal dips, simple curvatures, and three-dimensional (3D) folding restoration maps. The Gaussian curvatures and 3D faulting restoration maps can be used as proxies for fault-related fractures. Local hinge-related fractures may reflect local tangential longitudinal strain during large-scale fold tightening. Fold structures that have formed at an oblique orientation to the regional shortening direction show additional fracture arrays perpendicular to the hinge, indicating weak axial extension. This is presumed to develop as the arcuate thrust belt of Salakh Arch was amplified. The analysis here illustrates the importance of taking a 3D approach, especially for noncylindrical folds. The protocols developed in this study and their results may have general applicability to investigations of fracture patterns in other folds.

Highlights

  • Bed-scale structural damage, in the form of fractures and small faults, can be important for hydrocarbon production [1,2,3]

  • Late Neogene Barzaman Formation which was deposited during the Late Neogene Period

  • The Gaussian curvatures and 3D faulting restoration maps can be used as proxies for fault-related fractures

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Summary

Introduction

Bed-scale structural damage, in the form of fractures and small faults, can be important for hydrocarbon production [1,2,3]. These small structures are usually hard to map and predict in hydrocarbon reservoirs. Understanding fracture distributions along surface outcrops of folds can be very useful for mapping them in subsurface areas. This topic has been discussed for a long time, e.g., [4,5,6,7,8]. The fracture apertures display no Geosciences 2020, 10, 490; doi:10.3390/geosciences10120490 www.mdpi.com/journal/geosciences

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