“…Although the controls on the external morphology of natural salt diapirs are relatively welldocumented and understood (e.g. Talbot, 1986, 1991;Vendeville and Jackson, 1992;Koyi, 1998;Davison et al, 2000;Jackson, 2007, 2011;Stewart, 2007), considerably less is known about their internal structure and kinematics for four key reasons: (i) well-exposed, natural salt diapirs are rare because halite, a key component of many salt structures, is highly soluble and dissolves, whereas anhydrite, upon contact with water, converts to gypsum, leaving a karstic soil or crust that masks the diapir's internal structure (Jackson et al, 1990;Bruthans et al, 2009); (ii) the internal structure of exposed diapirs can be strongly deformed by gravity spreading of salt extruding at the Earth's surface (Talbot and Jackson, 1987;Talbot, 1998;Talbot and Aftabi, 2004); (iii) even where diapirs are well exposed at the Earth's (Jackson et al, 1990). The intrasalt stratigraphy here is similar to that in the Santos Basin, with massive halite-dominated sequences being overlain by impure, interlayered evaporites (see Fig.…”