PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS OF THRUST KINEMATICS IN THE LOWER CONGO BASIN, DEEPWATER SOUTHERN GABON
Thrust kinematics and associated salt tectonics are recorded by thickness variations in synkinematic sediments. These variations were quantified by time-thickness jumps in 9 stratigraphic intervals along 39 traverses across 7 dominant thrust faults. Expansion indices (time-thickness ratios across thrust faults) identify the initiation and cessation of faulting for a specific fault and qualitatively record fault slip rates through time. Additionally, variations in expansion indices along strike reveal differential fault slip and yield qualitative slip vectors for each time interval. Older thrusts in the distal region decrease in fault slip towards a central point along each thrust. This decrease implies convergent slip, a pattern typical of a coastal re-entrant. Additionally, identification of an oblique-slip lateral ramp nearby suggests crowding during convergent slip. Comparison of expansion indices across this lateral ramp and proximal younger thrusts show that distal thrusting ended as proximal thrusting culminated in the Late Cretaceous or early Paleogene.
Proximal thrusts have relatively continuous expansion indices along strike implying parallel rather than convergent slip.