TY - JOUR
T1 - Vertical stress history and paleoburial in foreland basins unravelled by stylolite roughness paleopiezometry
T2 - Insights from bedding-parallel stylolites in the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming, USA.
AU - Beaudoin, Nicolas
AU - Lacombe, Olivier
AU - Koehn, Daniel
AU - David, Marie Eléonore
AU - Farrell, Natalie
AU - Healy, David
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments on the manuscript and the journal Editor-in-Chief Cees Passchier for editorial handling. NB is funded through the ISITE program E2S , supported by ANR PIA and Région Nouvelle-Aquitaine . This work was funded by Sorbonne Université (Paris) through research agreement C14313 and by the European Union Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement n° 316889 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/7
Y1 - 2020/7
N2 - We apply the stylolite roughness inversion technique on sedimentary, bedding-parallel stylolites hosted in the Paleozoic carbonates of the Bighorn and Madison formations cropping out in the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming, USA. The inversion technique applied to bedding-parallel stylolites allows determination of the absolute magnitude of the vertical stress experienced at the time dissolution stops along the pressure-solution planes. At the basin scale, reconstructed vertical stress magnitudes range from 19 ± 2 MPa to 35 ± 4 MPa in the Bighorn Fm, and from 12 ± 2 MPa to 37 ± 4 MPa in the Madison Fm. Once converted into depth and compared with up-to-date basin models of burial and contractional history, the dataset highlights that bedding-parallel stylolites accommodated compaction from ca. 220 Ma until ca. 90 Ma, i.e. until stress build-up related to the Sevier contraction made the maximum horizontal principal stress high enough to overcome the vertical principal stress. This study is key to illustrate how stylolites can be used to consistently access paleoburial and to unravel both stress evolution and timing in foreland settings, and indicates that pressure-solution remains active throughout the carbonate deposition history.
AB - We apply the stylolite roughness inversion technique on sedimentary, bedding-parallel stylolites hosted in the Paleozoic carbonates of the Bighorn and Madison formations cropping out in the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming, USA. The inversion technique applied to bedding-parallel stylolites allows determination of the absolute magnitude of the vertical stress experienced at the time dissolution stops along the pressure-solution planes. At the basin scale, reconstructed vertical stress magnitudes range from 19 ± 2 MPa to 35 ± 4 MPa in the Bighorn Fm, and from 12 ± 2 MPa to 37 ± 4 MPa in the Madison Fm. Once converted into depth and compared with up-to-date basin models of burial and contractional history, the dataset highlights that bedding-parallel stylolites accommodated compaction from ca. 220 Ma until ca. 90 Ma, i.e. until stress build-up related to the Sevier contraction made the maximum horizontal principal stress high enough to overcome the vertical principal stress. This study is key to illustrate how stylolites can be used to consistently access paleoburial and to unravel both stress evolution and timing in foreland settings, and indicates that pressure-solution remains active throughout the carbonate deposition history.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85083303759
U2 - 10.1016/j.jsg.2020.104061
DO - 10.1016/j.jsg.2020.104061
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85083303759
SN - 0191-8141
VL - 136
SP - 1
EP - 10
JO - Journal of Structural Geology
JF - Journal of Structural Geology
M1 - 104061
ER -