Kilometre-scale sand injectites in the intracratonic Murzuq Basin (South-west Libya): an igneous trigger?

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  • Julien Moreau
  • Jean-Francois Ghienne
  • Andrew Hurst
Mount Telout, situated at the edge of the Murzuq Basin, is a 325 m high conical hill within a circular collapse structure that records 0.5 km3 of sand intrusion into Silurian shales. Based on a comparison with other similar circular collapse structures around the Murzuq Basin, it is argued that sand injection in the form of pipes occurred during the Devonian. The overpressures triggering the process are inferred to result from a combination of: (i) tectonic uplift at a basin scale that initially focused regional ground water flows; and (ii) igneous intrusion within the sand-rich Cambrian–Ordovician strata. The palaeorelief buried under the regionally extensive Silurian shales may have locally focused overpressures and localised sand injection at the 1 to 10 km scale. The Mount Telout injected sand body and related features offer exceptional, seismic-scale outcrop analogues for sand injections that are often identified in seismic reflection data. Large-scale sand injections might be essential in petroleum exploration of the North African Lower Palaeozoic basins as they form seal-bypass systems.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftSedimentology
Vol/bind59
Udgave nummer4
Sider (fra-til)1321-1344
Antal sider24
ISSN0037-0746
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2012

ID: 37972706