CROSS-SECTION BALANCING AND THERMOCHRONOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE MESOZOIC DEVELOPMENT OF THE EASTERN OTWAY BASIN

1997 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 390 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.T. Cooper ◽  
K.C. Hill

Recent advances in cross-section balancing software have simplified the application of basic geometric constraints to the analysis of basin development. Geometric analysis of field and seismic data allows the user to verify initial interpretations and also elucidates important information about the structural evolution of a basin. Principally, computerised balancing and restoration of cross-sections assists in constraining:the amount of crustal extension;trap geometries, particularly fault geometries through time;the geometry of key horizons at any time, revealing basin morphology and migration paths;the time and amount of maximum burial and hence hydrocarbon migration; andthe likely mechanisms involved in basin evolution. In turn, these parameters can be used to further assess hydrocarbon prospectivity by providing useful data for lithospheric modelling.This study utilises 2D cross-section balancing software (Geosec™) to decompact, balance and restore a series of regional onshore-offshore cross-sections based on both reflection seismic data in the Torquay Embayment and field mapping in the Otway Ranges. The thickness of eroded strata has been constrained by Apatite Fission Track and Vitrinite Reflectance analyses. The resulting section restoration suggests that the eastern Otway Basin experienced extension of 26 per cent in the Early Cretaceous and that the Otway Ranges were subjected to −8 per cent shortening during mid-Cretaceous inversion and −4 per cent shortening during Mio-Pliocene inversion.The structural style of the Otway Ranges and Torquay Embayment is typified by steep, relatively planar, en echelon, N and NE-dipping Early Cretaceous extension faults that were subsequently inverted and eroded during the Cenomanian and Mio-Pliocene. The structural style of the region shows strong similarities with oblique- rift analogue models suggesting that the extensional history of the region was strongly controlled by prevailing basement fabric.Lower Cretaceous source rocks in the eastern Otway Basin reached maximum maturity prior to mid-Cretaceous inversion with the exception of parts of the Torquay Embayment which may not have experienced significant uplift and erosion at this time. The lack of subsidence in the eastern Otway Basin prevented the deposition of significant amounts of Upper Cretaceous sediments which are proven reservoirs in the western Otway Basin and Gippsland Basin. Subsequent Tertiary burial was insufficient, in most regions, to allow the source rocks re-enter the oil generation window.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anastasia Kushnareva ◽  
Artem Moskalenko ◽  
Alexander Pasenko

<p>The Talas Range forms the northwest part of the Caledonides of the Northern Tian Shan. Based on differences in the structural style, metamorphism and sedimentary successions, three thrust sheets have been identified – the Uzunakhmat, Talas, and Kumyshtag thrust sheets. The Talas and Kumyshtag thrust sheets consist of Neoproterozoic-Ordovician terrigenous and carbonate rock units, whereas the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet consists of Neoproterozoic terrigenous rocks metamorphosed up to greenschist facies. The Uzunakhmat thrust sheet is separated from the Talas and Kumyshtag thrust sheets by the southwest-dipping Central Talas thrust (CTT). The dextral strike-slip Talas-Fergana Fault bounds the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet in the southwest. The main deformation events occurred in the Middle-Late Ordovician.</p><p>Structural and strain studies were done along profiles normal to the strike of folds and faults and located in the northwest and southeast parts of the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet. We also incorporate in our study structural profile in the central part of the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet, documented by Khudoley (1993) and Voytenko & Khudoley (2012).</p><p>The main strain indicators were detrital quartz grains in sandstones. Rf/φ and Normalized Fry methods were used to identify the amount of strain. Oblate ellipsoids predominate with Rxz values varying mostly from 1,6 to 2,4. Long axes of strain ellipsoids are sub-horizontal with the southeast to east-southeast trend. Similar trends have long axes of the anisotropy magnetic susceptibility ellipsoid being parallel to fold axes, cleavage-bedding intersection and mineral lineation as well as the trend of the major thrusts, including CTT.</p><p>The modern shape of the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet is similar to an elongated triangle, pinching out northwest and expanding southeast. Cross-section balancing corrected for the amount of strain shows along-strike decreasing of shortening in the southeast direction. Total shortening varies from 35% to 55% between sections located about 15 km from each other. Such significant variation in shortening corresponds to variation in structural style with much more tight folds and more numerous thrusts for cross-sections with a higher amount of shortening. However, the restored length of all cross-sections is quite similar pointing to the approximately rectangular initial shape of the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet. Our interpretation is that during the Caledonian tectonic events, the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet was displaced in the northwest direction with accompanied thrusting and folding of rock units within the thrust sheet. These deformations formed the modern shape of the thrust sheet in accordance with the amount of shortening detected by cross-section balancing. This interpretation also implies that modern erosion did not significantly affect shape of the Uzunakhmat thrust sheet formed after the Caledonian deformation.</p><p>Khudoley, A.K., 1993. Structural and strain analyses of the middle part of the Talassian Alatau ridge (Middle Asia, Kirgiystan). J. Struct. Geol. 6, 693–706.</p><p>Voytenko N.V., Khudoley A.K. Structural evolution of metamorphic rocks in the Talas Alatau, Tien Shan, Central Asia: Implication for early stages of the Talas-Ferghana Fault. // C. R. Geoscience. 2012. V. 344. P. 138–148.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam J. Cawood ◽  
David A. Ferrill ◽  
Alan P. Morris ◽  
David Norris ◽  
David McCallum ◽  
...  

<p>The Orphan Basin on the eastern edge of the Newfoundland continental margin formed as a Mesozoic rift basin prior to continental breakup associated with the opening of the North Atlantic. Few exploration wells exist in the basin, and until recently regional interpretations have been based on sparse seismic data coverage - because of this the structural evolution of the Orphan Basin has historically not been well understood. Key uncertainties include the timing and amount of rift-related extension, dominant extension directions, and the structural styles that accommodated progressive rift development in the basin.     </p><p>Interpretation of newly acquired modern broadband seismic data and structural restoration of three regional, WNW-ESE oriented cross-sections across the Orphan Basin and Flemish Cap provide new insights into rift evolution and structural style in the area. Our results show that major extension in the basin occurred between 167 Ma and 135 Ma, with most extension occurring prior to 151 Ma. We show that extension after 135 Ma largely occurred east of Flemish Cap due to a shift in the locus of rifting from the Orphan Basin to east of Flemish Cap. We find no evidence for discrete rifting events in the Orphan Basin, as has been suggested by other authors.  Kinematic restoration and associated heave measurements for the Orphan Basin show that extension was both widespread and relatively evenly distributed across the basin from Middle-Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous.</p><p>We provide evidence for more widespread deposition of Jurassic strata throughout the Orphan Basin than previously interpreted, and show that Jurassic deposition was controlled by the occurrence and displacement of crustal-scale extensional detachment faults.  Structure in the three regional cross sections is dominated by large-scale, shallowly dipping extensional detachment faults. These faults mainly dip to the northwest and control the geometry and position of extensional basins – grabens and half-grabens – which occur at a range of scales. Stacked detachment surfaces, hyperextension, and attenuation of the crust are observed in central and eastern parts of the Orphan Basin. Zones of extreme crustal attenuation (to ca. 3.7 km) are interpreted to be coincident with large-displacement (up to 60 km) low-angle detachments. Results from crustal area balancing suggest that up to 41% of extension is not recognized through structural seismic interpretation, which we attribute to subseismic-scale ductile and brittle deformation, and uncertainties in the identification of detachment surfaces or complex structural configurations (e.g., overprinting of early extensional deformation).</p><p>Rifting style in the central, northern, and eastern parts of the Orphan Basin is dominated by low-angle detachment faulting with maximum extension perpendicular to the incipient rift axis. In contrast, structural geometries in the southwestern part of the basin are suggestive of transtensional deformation, and interplay of normal and strike-slip faulting.  Results from map-based interpretation show that strike-slip faults within this transtensional zone are associated with displacement transfer between half-grabens of opposing polarity, rather than regional strike-slip displacement.  These structures are interpreted as contemporaneous and kinematically linked to displacement along low-angle detachment surfaces elsewhere, and are not attributed to distinct episodes of oblique extension.       </p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 187 (2) ◽  
pp. 83-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josselin Berthelon ◽  
William Sassi

Abstract Using the geologist’s interpretation of 6 published balanced cross-sections in the fold and thrust belts of the northwestern Mediterranean, a comparative analysis of the interpreted subsurface structural architecture is used to address the links between the structural style and the mechanics of fold and thrust emplacement. For each cross-section example, the geo-dataset and the methods used by the interpreters are different in quantity and quality. Here we have examined how useful is the content of information of each cross-section to constrain the structural evolution scenario. Each interpretation is examined according to considerations of the mechanics of sedimentary basin deformation and how uncertain is the extrapolation of fault trajectory at depth. It is shown that each case reveals a particular type of structural style: thin-skin or thick skin tectonics, fault-related folding, pre-existing fault pattern. The present structural analysis is used to determine for each cross-section the nature of the mechanical problem to address that will reduce uncertainty on the geologic scenario reconstruction. The proposed mechanical boundary conditions could serve to develop analog or numerical models that aim at testing the mechanical validity of the structural scenario of fold and thrust emplacement.


1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 34 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. J. Stagg

The Scott Plateau and the adjacent Rowley Terrace cover about 130,000 km2 beyond Australia's Northwest Shelf in water depths ranging from 300 m to 3000 m. The regional geology and structural evolution of the area have been interpreted from about 13,000 km of seismic reflection profiles.The Scott Plateau forms a subsided oceanward margin to the Browse Basin. For much of the period from the Carboniferous to the Middle Jurassic, preceding the breakup which formed this part of the continental margin, the Scott Plateau was probably above sea level shedding sediment into the developing Browse Basin. After breakup in the Bathonian to Callovian, the plateau subsided, until by the Late Cretaceous open marine conditions were prevalent over most of the area, with the probable exception of some structurally high areas which may have remained emergent until early in the Tertiary. Carbonate sedimentation commenced in the Santonian and has continued to the present, with major hiatuses in the Paleocene and Oligocene. Analysis of magnetic and seismic data indicates that, over much of the plateau, economic basement of possible Kimberley Block equivalents is probably no more than 3 to 4 km below sea bed. To the south of the Scott Plateau, the Rowley Terrace is underlain by a wedge of at least 6 km of Mesozoic and Tertiary sediments of the northeast- trending Rowley Sub - basin. The Rowley Sub -basin connects with the Beagle Sub-basin to the southwest and probably connects with the Browse Basin to the northeast. It has been largely unaffected by episodes of faulting, except in the southwest where faulting and folding are pronounced. The petroleum potential of the Scott Plateau is not rated highly. The potential hydrocarbon-bearing sediments here are probably no younger than Palaeozoic. These are quite likely to be only 2 to 4 km thick, and any hydrocarbons generated within them would probably have been lost during the protracted period of emergence and erosion that preceded breakup. The hydrocarbon potential appears to be greater in the Rowley Sub-basin, where Triassic to Cretaceous shale and siltstone source rocks, and Triassic to Lower Cretaceous sandstone reservoir rocks are expected to be present. However, the potential of these sequences is downgraded because hydrocarbon shows in exploration wells on the adjacent part of the Northwest Shelf have been only minor, and by the apparent scarcity of suitable traps. Exploitation of any hydrocarbons would be costly owing to the great water depths.


1995 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 358 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Lovibond ◽  
R.J. Suttill ◽  
J.E. Skinner ◽  
A.N. Aburas

The Penola Trough is an elongate, Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous, NW-SE trending half graben filled mainly with synrift sediments of the Crayfish Group. Katnook-1 discovered gas in the basal Eumeralla Formation, but all commercial discoveries have been within the Crayfish Group, particularly the Pretty Hill Formation. Recent improvements in seismic data quality, in conjunction with additional well control, have greatly improved the understanding of the stratigraphy, structure and hydrocarbon prospectivity of the trough. Strati-graphic units within the Pretty Hill Formation are now mappable seismically. The maturity of potential source rocks within these deeper units has been modelled, and the distribution and quality of potential reservoir sands at several levels within the Crayfish Group have been studied using both well and seismic data. Evaluation of the structural history of the trough, the risk of a late carbon dioxide charge to traps, the direct detection of gas using seismic AVO analysis, and the petrophysical ambiguities recorded in wells has resulted in new insights. An important new play has been recognised on the northern flank of the Penola Trough: a gas and oil charge from mature source rocks directly overlying basement into a quartzose sand sequence referred to informally as the Sawpit Sandstone. This play was successfully tested in early 1994 by Wynn-1 which flowed both oil and gas during testing from the Sawpit Sandstone. In mid 1994, Haselgrove-1 discovered commercial quantities of gas in a tilted Pretty Hill Formation fault block adjacent to the Katnook Field. These recent discoveries enhance the prospectivity of the Penola Trough and of the Early Cretaceous sequence in the wider Otway Basin where these sediments are within reach of the drill.


2005 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 381 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.C. Hodge

Seismic interpretation of the Cliff Head oil field has shown it to be structurally complex with reverse faults, wrench faults and listric faults mapped at both field and reservoir scale within the Permo-Triassic section.The Cliff Head field overlies the Abrolhos Transfer Zone and has strong similarity to the progressive evolution, internal structure and rhomboid map geometry in experimental models of restraining stepovers in strikeslip systems. It is concluded that the Cliff Head oil field is a pop-up structure formed during the Permian and early Cretaceous within a restrained convergent wrench system—the result of sinistral transpression.A similar style of faulting could be applied when mapping seismic data in other offshore areas and especially the onshore Perth Basin with its poorer seismic data quality.Interpretation of prospects with a strong reverse or wrench component has implications for the timing of hydrocarbon emplacement and the potential for seal breach and leakage. Furthermore, paleo-structural style will determine fracture density and orientation and may be critical in determining optimum design of producer and injection wells during field development.It is recommended that interpreters of seismic data in the Perth Basin treat the fault patterns and structural trends of the Permian and early Cretaceous as different structural packages. The two should only be linked when it is very clear that there is a strong early Cretaceous overprint.


1994 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 614
Author(s):  
B.A. McConachie ◽  
P.W. Stainton ◽  
M.G. Barlow ◽  
J.N. Dunster

The Carpentaria Basin is late Jurassic to early Cretaceous in age and underlies most of the Gulf of Carpentaria and surrounding onshore areas. The Carpentaria Basin is stratigraphically equivalent to the Eromanga and Papuan Basins where similar reservoir rocks produce large volumes of hydrocarbons.Drillholes Duyken–1, Jackie Ck–1 and 307RD12 provide regional lithostratigraphic and tectonic control for the Q22P permit in the offshore Carpentaria Basin. Duyken–1 penetrated the upper seal section in the Carpentaria Basin and a full sequence through the overlying Karumba Basin. Jackin Ck–1 intersected the lower reservoir units and a condensed upper seal section of the Carpentaria Basin. Coal drillhole 307RD12 tested the late Jurassic to early Cretaceous reservoir section in the Carpentaria Basin and also intersected an underlying Permian infrabasin sequence.Little is known of the pre Jurassic sedimentary section below the offshore Carpentaria Basin but at least two different rock packages appear to be present. The most encouraging are relatively small, layered, low velocity, channel and half-graben fill, possibly related to Permian or Permo-Triassic sedimentary rocks to the east in the Olive River area. The other packages consist of poorly defined, discontinuous, high velocity rocks believed to be related to those of the Bamaga Basin which have been mapped further north.During the period 1990-1993 Comalco Aluminium Limited reprocessed 2188 km of existing seismic data and acquired 2657 km of new seismic data over the offshore Carpentaria Basin. When combined with onshore seismic and the results of drilling previously undertaken by Comalco near Weipa on northwestern Cape York Peninsula, it was possible to define a significant and untested play in the Carpentaria Depression, the deepest part of the offshore Carpentaria Basin.The main play in the basin is the late Jurassic to early Cretaceous reservoir sandstones and source rocks, sealed by thick early Cretaceous mudstones. Possible pre-Jurassic source rocks are also present in discontinuous fault controlled half-grabens underlying the Carpentaria Basin. New detailed basin modelling suggests both the lower part of the Carpentaria Basin and any pre Jurassic section are mature within the depression and any source rocks present should have expelled oil.


2021 ◽  
pp. M57-2018-19
Author(s):  
Alf Eivind Ryseth ◽  
Dominique Similox-Tohon ◽  
Olaf Thieβen

AbstractThe Tromsø - Bjørnøya composite tectono-sedimentary element in the southwestern Barents Sea comprises strata of Late Paleozoic - Paleocene age. Since the Paleozoic Caledonian orogeny, the structural evolution of the CTSE is mainly related to extension, culminating in Late Jurassic - Early Cretaceous hyperextension. Some compressive deformation observed during Late Cretaceous - Paleogene times may relate to activity in the North Atlantic prior to the Early Eocene onset of sea floor spreading between Norway and Greenland.The sedimentary succession may be up to 14 km thick. It comprises Late Paleozoic continental facies, followed by carbonates, evaporites and eventually cherts and marine clastic material. The overlying Triassic - Paleocene succession is entirely siliciclastic, reflecting Triassic - Middle Jurassic deltaic and shallow marine conditions followed by deeper marine conditions during Late Jurassic - Paleocene times.Primary reservoirs are encountered in the latest Triassic - Middle Jurassic succession, with secondary reservoirs found in Late Jurassic - Early Cretaceous syn-rift succession, and in Paleocene strata. The primary source rock for petroleum is of Late Jurassic - Early Cretaceous age. Other source rocks include strata of Triassic and Barremian age, and a recently observed unit of Cenomanian - Early Turonian age.


2019 ◽  
Vol 487 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W. H. Butler ◽  
Clare E. Bond ◽  
Mark A. Cooper ◽  
Hannah Watkins

AbstractThe margins to evolving orogenic belts experience near layer-parallel contraction that can evolve into fold–thrust belts. Developing cross-section-scale understanding of these systems necessitates structural interpretation. However, over the past several decades a false distinction has arisen between some forms of so-called fault-related folding and buckle folding. We investigate the origins of this confusion and seek to develop unified approaches for interpreting fold–thrust belts that incorporate deformation arising both from the amplification of buckling instabilities and from localized shear failures (thrust faults). Discussions are illustrated using short case studies from the Bolivian Subandean chain (Incahuasi anticline), the Canadian Cordillera (Livingstone anticlinorium) and Subalpine chains of France and Switzerland. Only fault–bend folding is purely fault-related and other forms, such as fault-propagation and detachment folds, all involve components of buckling. Better integration of understanding of buckling processes, the geometries and structural evolutions that they generate may help to understand how deformation is distributed within fold–thrust belts. It may also reduce the current biases engendered by adopting a narrow range of idealized geometries when constructing cross-sections and evaluating structural evolution in these systems.


2008 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 1-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henrik I. Petersen ◽  
Lars H. Nielsen ◽  
Jørgen A. Bojesen-Koefoed ◽  
Anders Mathiesen ◽  
Lars Kristensen ◽  
...  

The quality, thermal maturity and distribution of potential source rocks within the Palaeozoic–Mesozoic succession of the Danish part of the Norwegian-Danish Basin have been evaluated on the basis of screening data from over 4000 samples from the pre-Upper Cretaceous succession in 33 wells. The Lower Palaeozoic in the basin is overmature and the Upper Cretaceous – Cenozoic strata have no petroleum generation potential, but the Toarcian marine shales of the Lower Jurassic Fjerritslev Formation (F-III, F-IV members) and the uppermost Jurassic – lowermost Cretaceous shales of the Frederikshavn Formation may qualify as potential source rocks in parts of the basin. Neither of these potential source rocks has a basinwide distribution; the present occurrence of the Lower Jurassic shales was primarily determined by regional early Middle Jurassic uplift and erosion. The generation potential of these source rocks is highly variable. The F-III and F-IV members show significant lateral changes in generation capacity, the best-developed source rocks occurring in the basin centre. The combined F-III and F-IV members in the Haldager-1, Kvols-1 and Rønde-1 wells contain 'net source-rock' thicknesses (cumulative thickness of intervals with Hydrogen Index (HI)> 200 mg HC/g TOC) of 40 m, 83 m, and 92 m, respectively, displaying average HI values of 294, 369 and 404 mg HC/g TOC. The Mors-1 well contains 123 m of 'net source rock' with an average HI of 221 mg HC/g TOC. Parts of the Frederikshavn Formation possess a petroleum generation potential in the Hyllebjerg-1, Skagen-2, Voldum-1 and Terne-1 wells, the latter well containing a c. 160 m thick highly oil-prone interval with an average HI of 478 mg HC/g TOC and maximum HI values> 500 mg HC/g TOC.The source-rock evaluation suggests that a Mesozoic petroleum system is the most likely in the study area. Two primary plays are possible: (1) the Upper Triassic – lowermost Jurassic Gassum play, and (2) the Middle Jurassic Haldager Sand play. Potential trap structures are widely distributed in the basin, most commonly associated with the flanks of salt diapirs. The plays rely on charge from the Lower Jurassic (Toarcian) or uppermost Jurassic – lowermost Cretaceous shales. Both plays have been tested with negative results, however, and failure is typically attributed to insufficient maturation (burial depth) of the source rocks. This maturation question has been investigated by analysis of vitrinite reflectance data from the study area, corrected for post-Early Cretaceous uplift. A likely depth to the top of the oil window (vitrinite reflectance = 0.6%Ro) is c. 3050–3100 m based on regional coalification curves. The Frederikshavn Formation had not been buried to this depth prior to post-Early Cretaceous exhumation, and the potential source rocks of the formation are thermally immature in terms of hydrocarbon generation. The potential source rocks of the Fjerritslev Formation are generally immature to very early mature. Mature source rocks in the Danish part of the Norwegian–Danish Basin are thus dependent on local, deeper burial to reach the required thermal maturity for oil generation. Such potential kitchen areas with mature Fjerritslev Formation source rocks may occur in the central part of the study area (central–northern Jylland), and a few places offshore. These inferred petroleum kitchens are areally restricted, mainly associated with salt structures and local grabens (such as the Fjerritslev Trough and the Himmerland Graben).


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