The outer parts of collision mountain belts are commonly represented by fold and thrust belts. Many of the key concepts in the structural geology of fold and thrust belts have origins in ancient orogens such as the Appalachians and Caledonian chains of Europe, together with the Alps. Impetus in thrust belt research then came from the desire to exploit geological resources that reside in the subsurface, especially arising from hydrocarbon exploration in the foothills of the Canadian Cordillera in the 1960s and 1970s. Notwithstanding decades of exploitation, continental fold and thrust belts are still estimated to hold reserves of 700 billion barrels of oil equivalent. But exploration will focus increasingly on small, hard-to-resolve structures. Basic geological understanding remains as important today as it did for the pioneering explorers in the Canadian foothills. It is a theme that runs throughout this Special Publication.
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This volume has evolved from papers written in memory of Professor David
Roberts. They summarize the key findings of recent research on passive
margins, from tectonics, bathymetry, stratigraphy and sedimentation,
structural evolution and magmatism. Papers include analyses of the central
and southern Atlantic margins of South America and Africa, papers on
magmatism and extension in the NE Brazilian margin and on the Cote de Ivoire
margin, rift architectures of the NW Red Sea margin, tectonics of the
eastern Mediterranean margin, salt tectonics of passive margins of the Gulf
of Mexico and Brazil, and papers on the NW Shelf margin of Australia. The
volume provides readers with new insights into the complexities of passive
margin systems that are in reality, not so passive.
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