2012, Journal of Structural Geology, 42, 151-162
Abstract
Fluid overpressure at the base of low-permeability strata reduces effective stress, allowing for gravitational sliding of the overlying cover. The force driving sliding is the slope-parallel component of the weight of the cover, whereas the resisting forces are the friction at the base of the cover and the buttressing resistance to shortening, which can be critically reduced by incision at the base of the slope. We developed an analytical model and undertook a series of analogue experiments to better understand the evolution of a sedimentary cover sliding above a low-permeability layer subjected to fluid overpressure. Where a downslope buttress was present, the sliding sheet length decreased with increasing pore-fluid pressure. In the absence of such buttress, the slide's length increased exponentially with increasing pore-fluid pressure. Another important difference dealt with geometry and kinematics. Buttressed slides consisted of one large slope-parallel mass rigidly translated and bounded by downslope thrusts and upslope normal faults. With increasing pore-fluid pressure, the contractional structures propagated upslope. By contrast, non-buttressed slides showed intense strain: deformation started with normal faults forming near the incision, then propagating upslope throughout the slide's evolution.
Gravitational instabilities triggered by fluid overpressure and downslope incision – Insights from analytical and analogue modelling
Lacoste, A., Vendeville, B., Mourgues, R., Loncke, L., Lebacq, M.
Lacoste, A., Vendeville, B., Mourgues, R., Loncke, L., Lebacq, M., 2012, Gravitational instabilities triggered by fluid overpressure and downslope incision - Insights from analytical and analogue modeling, Journal of Structural Geology, 42, 151-162.
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