Structure and evolution of the Neogene Guercif Basin at the junction of the Middle Atlas Mountains and the Rif Thrust Belt, Morocco
Francisco Gomez, Muawia Barazangi
Institute for the Study of the Continents and Department of Geological
Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, Snee Hall, New York 14853
Ahmed Demnati
Office National de Réchèrche et d’Éxploitations
Petrolières, B.P. 8030, Rabat, Morocco
The Guercif Basin of northern Morocco occupies a
50 x 60 km area where the transpressional Middle Atlas mountains terminate
and abut the Rif thrust belt. Analysis of over 800 km of 2-D seismic
reflection profiles and 8 exploratory wells, in combination with existing
geological data, suggests a Late Miocene episode of extension (4%, or 1.7
km, maximum) and a subsequent episode of contraction since the end of the
Miocene. Most of the Late Miocene deposition was concentrated in
a narrow graben (herein referred to as the Guercif graben) which contrasts
with the wider physiographic expression of the basin today. Geohistory
analysis indicates that tectonic subsidence persisted until the Messinian.
Sediment loading continued to drive subsidence even after extension stopped.
Timing constraints demonstrate the contemporaneity of the Guercif graben
and WSW-vergent thrust tectonics of the Rif thrust belt. Similar
timing and proximity with the Rif, as well as the graben geometry, suggest
that extension in the Guercif Basin, in addition to other smaller extensional
basins in the northern Middle Atlas region adjacent to the Rif, may represent
the distal effects of a broad lateral shear zone bounding the thrust belt.
The Neogene Guercif basin is superimposed on the
Mesozoic Middle Atlas rift which experienced basin inversion during the
Cenozoic, and seismic reflection interpretations in the southern Guercif
Basin depict old Mesozoic rift faults reactivated as reverse faults.
Unconformities illustrate that the uplift of the Middle Atlas appears to
be primarily a late Cenozoic phenomenon. The Guercif Basin offers
a special opportunity for petroleum exploration within an aborted rift
basin such as the Middle Atlas. Mesozoic source rocks in the Middle
Atlas may have been sufficiently buried beneath Neogene basin sediments
to reach maturity, and the late Cenozoic timing of contraction can produce
suitable structural traps.