Structures may form during continued sedimentary loading, without any external tectonic influence, due to gravitational instability. Pure
halite has a density of 2160 kg/m3. When initially deposited,
sediments generally have a lower density of 2000 kg/m3, but with loading and compaction their density increases to 2500 kg/m3, which is greater than that of salt. Once the overlying layers have become denser, the weak salt layer will tend to deform into a characteristic series of ridges and depressions, due to a form of
Rayleigh–Taylor instability. Further sedimentation will be concentrated in the depressions, and the salt will continue to move away from them into the ridges. At a late stage,
diapirs tend to initiate at the junctions between ridges, their growth fed by movement of salt along the ridge system, continuing until the salt supply is exhausted. During the later stages of this process, the top of the diapir remains at or near the surface, with further burial being matched by diapir rise, and is sometimes referred to as
downbuilding. The
Schacht Asse II and
Gorleben salt domes in Germany are an example of a purely passive salt structure. Such structures do not always form when a salt layer is buried beneath a sedimentary overburden. This can be due to a relatively high strength overburden or to the presence of sedimentary layers interbedded within the salt unit that increase both its density and strength. ==Active salt structures==