Inhaltsbereich
Scientific Drilling ICDP Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 18152)
We applied scaled physical analogue experiments to investigate the early development of salt diapirs induced
by differential sedimentary loading in an intra-continental basin realm (e.g. the North German
Basin). During the experiments, deformation in a salt-analogue viscous layer was initiated by variations in
the thickness of an overlying brittle material and subsequent accumulation of the brittle material further sustained
deformation. A 2D optical image correlation system was used to monitor the strain evolution in the
salt analogue material. Our models indicate that the formation of salt pillow structures can be achieved by
minimum variations in the overburden loading. The increase of differential loading by adding synkinematic
layers in the subsided areas causes not only an active piercing of the viscous layer through the brittle overburden
but also an additional uplift in the adjacent areas. These elevations, named “secondary structures”,
act as origins for a successive generation of diapirs. Consequently, an initial perturbation of the salt–sediment-interface
can lead to a lateral propagation temporally shifted diapirs. The linkage between primary and secondary
structures is reflected in the synkinematic overburden layers such as overlapping peripheral sinks in the transition
zone between two diapirs. These sinks, in turn, are a frequently observable phenomenon around salt structures
of the North German basin indicating that “secondary diapirism” is an underestimated process – besides
regional tectonic stresses – influencing the evolution of salt structures.
(2012 online): Salt diapirism driven by differential loading - Some insights from analogue modelling. Tectonophysics.
(2012 online): Salt diapirism driven by differential loading - Some insights from analogue modelling. Tectonophysics.

