STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY AND TECTONIC ANALYSIS OF THE BALCONES FAULT ZONE IN THE UPPER SECO CREEK AREA, EDWARDS AQUIFER, SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS
Miocene age faults within the BFZ are en echelon, exhibit primarily normal displacement, and trend northeast with downthrow to the southeast. Numerous smaller cross-faults trending to the NW-SE connect the larger primary faults creating a sizeable, highly fragmented, SW-dipping relay ramp. Continued displacement and subsequent deformation of the ramp-bounding hanging wall and footwall cutoffs generate cross-faults trending at high angles to the overlapping faults, which breach the relay ramp and link the major faults. Because intact relay ramps can provide ground-water flow pathways between faults, the intrablock deformation and faulting associated with these ramps in a carbonate aquifer, such as the Edwards, can result in increased fracture porosity and directional permeability within the relay ramp and may provide zones of enhanced flow across the regional NE-SW trend.