Popis: |
Rift basins typically comprise three main tectono-stratigraphic stages; pre-, syn-, and post-rift. The syn-rift stage is characterized by the deposition of asymmetric wedges of growth strata that record differential subsidence caused by active normal faulting. The subsequent post-rift stage is defined by long-wavelength subsidence driven by lithospheric cooling, and is typified by the deposition of broadly tabular stratal packages that drape any rift-related relief. The stratigraphic contact between syn- and post-rift rocks is often expressed as an erosional unconformity. However, the late syn-rift to early post-rift stratigraphic record is commonly far more complex since: (i) the associated tectonic transition is not instantaneous; (ii) net-subsidence may be punctuated by transient periods of uplift; and (iii) strain often migrates oceanward during rifting and continental breakup. The marginal basins of southeastern Brazil, including the Campos Basin, have not historically used the tripartite scheme outlined above, with the post-pre-rift interval instead being subdivided into rift, sag, and passive margin tectono-stratigraphic stages. The sag stage has been previously described as late syn-rift, early post-rift, or as a transition between the two, with the passive margin stage being equivalent to the classically defined post-rift stage. Two (rather than one) erosional unconformities are also identified within the rift-to-sag succession. We here use 2D and 3D seismic reflection and borehole data to discuss the expression of and controls on the syn- to post-rift transition in the south-central Campos Basin, offshore southeast Brazil. We mapped three intervals bounded by unconformities. The Barremian - lower Aptian interval is characterized by wedge-shaped packages of reflections that thicken towards graben and half-graben-bounding normal faults. This stage ends with a development of an angular unconformity, inferred to form during the onset of the oceanward migration of deformation. The upper Aptian interval is subdivided into two units; the pre-salt and salt. The pre-salt is typically defined by packages of subparallel and relatively continuous reflections that are broadly lenticular and thin towards fault-bound basement highs, but that locally diverge towards rift-related normal faults. The pre-salt to salt contact is defined by an erosional unconformity that is largely restricted to basement highs, and which is inferred to have formed due to base-level fall and uplift associated with local fault reactivation. Based on their geometries and seismic facies, we conclude that the Barremian – lower Aptian interval is syn-rifting and syn-tectonic, deposited during active continental extension and upper crustal faulting affecting the entire evolving margin, whereas the overlying upper Aptian interval is syn-rifting and post-tectonic, deposited when extension and faulting had migrated seaward to the future location of plate rupture and ocean development. The results of our study support the arising notion that the tripartite tectono-stratigraphic model for rift development is too simplistic and cannot be applied when assessing rifts in the context of the regional development of continental margins. |