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Salt movements in the Northeast German Basin and its relation to major post-Permian tectonic phases; results from 3D structural modelling, backstripping and reflection seismic data

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Scheck,  M.
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Bayer,  Ulf
4.3 Organic Geochemistry, 4.0 Chemistry and Material Cycles, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

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Lewerenz,  Björn
4.4 Basin Analysis, 4.0 Chemistry and Material Cycles, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

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Citation

Scheck, M., Bayer, U., Lewerenz, B. (2003): Salt movements in the Northeast German Basin and its relation to major post-Permian tectonic phases; results from 3D structural modelling, backstripping and reflection seismic data. - Tectonophysics, 361, 3-4, 277-299.


https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_229407
Abstract
The NW-SE-striking Northeast German Basin (NEGB) forms part of the Southern Permian Basin and contains up to 8 km of Permian to Cenozoic deposits. During its polyphase evolution, mobilization of the Zechstein salt layer resulted in a complex structural configuration with thin-skinned deformation in the basin and thick-skinned deformation at the basin margins. We investigated the role of salt as a decoupling horizon between its substratum and its cover during the Mesozoic deformation by integration of 3D structural modelling, backstripping and seismic interpretation. Our results suggest that periods of Mesozoic salt movement correlate temporally with changes of the regional stress field structures. Post-depositional salt mobilisation was weakest in the area of highest initial salt thickness and thickest overburden. This also indicates that regional tectonics is responsible for the initiation of salt movements rather than stratigraphic density inversion.Salt movement mainly took place in post-Muschelkalk times. The onset of salt diapirism with the formation of N-S-oriented rim synclines in Late Triassic was synchronous with the development of the NNE-SSW-striking Rheinsberg Trough due to regional E-W extension. In the Middle and Late Jurassic, uplift affected the northern part of the basin and may have induced south-directed gravity gliding in the salt layer. In the southern part, deposition continued in the Early Cretaceous. However, rotation of salt rim synclines axes to NW-SE as well as accelerated rim syncline subsidence near the NW-SE-striking Gardelegen Fault at the southern basin margin indicates a change from E-W extension to a tectonic regime favoring the activation of NW-SE-oriented structural elements. During the Late Cretaceous-Earliest Cenozoic, diapirism was associated with regional N-S compression and progressed further north and west. The Mesozoic interval was folded with the formation of WNW-trending salt-cored anticlines parallel to inversion structures and to differentially uplifted blocks. Late Cretaceous-Early Cenozoic compression caused partial inversion of older rim synclines and reverse reactivation of some Late Triassic to Jurassic normal faults in the salt cover. Subsequent uplift and erosion affected the pre-Cenozoic layers in the entire basin. In the Cenozoic, a last phase of salt tectonic deformation was associated with regional subsidence of the basin. Diapirism of the maturest pre-Cenozoic salt structures continued with some Cenozoic rim synclines overstepping older structures. The difference between the structural wavelength of the tighter folded Mesozoic interval and the wider Cenozoic structures indicates different tectonic regimes in Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic. We suggest that horizontal strain propagation in the brittle salt cover was accommodated by viscous flow in the decoupling salt layer and thus salt motion passively balanced Late Triassic extension as well as parts of Late Cretaceous-Early Tertiary compression