scholarly journals POLA ANOMALI GAYABERAT DAERAH TALIABU-MANGOLE DAN LAUT SEKITARNYA TERKAIT DENGAN PROSPEK MINYAK BUMI DAN GAS

2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 65
Author(s):  
Saultan Panjaitan ◽  
Subagio Subagio

Anomali gayaberat di daerah penelitian merupakan anomali tertinggi di Indonesia, secara umum dikelompokkan ke dalam 2 (dua) satuan, yaitu: kelompok anomali gayaberat 160 mGal hingga 260 mGal membentuk pola rendahan/cekungan anomali, dan kelompok anomali gayaberat 260 mGal hingga 620 mGal membentuk pola tinggian anomali. Anomali sisa 0 mGal hingga 5 mGal membentuk tinggian anomali, diduga merupakan gambaran antiklin dengan diameter 10 – 15 kilometer. Perangkap struktur migas di daerah Minaluli, Madafuhi dan Lekosula Pulau Mangole berdekatan dengan lokasi rembesan migas, sehingga diusulkan untuk dilakukan pemboran eksplorasi. Sedangkan di Pulau Taliabu, Tolong, Pena, Samuya dan Teluk Jiko masih perlu dilakukan penambahan data. Batuan reservoir terdiri dari batupasir dan batugamping Formasi Tanamu berumur Kapur Akhir, menempati daerah beranomali sisa 0 mGal hingga 5 mGal, dengan rapat massa batuan sekitar 2.65 gr/cm³. Batuan induk adalah Formasi Buya umur Jura Tengah - Jura Akhir dari serpih hitam dengan rapat massa 2.71 gr/cm³, dan dapur migas terbentuk di sekitar daerah beranomali sisa -4 mGal hingga -28 mGal yang membentuk sub-cekungan di utara lepas pantai Pulau Mangole. Kata kunci: gayaberat, dapur minyak, cekungan, migas, serpih hitam, anomali sisa, rapat massa, antiklin, batuan induk. The gravity anomaly of research area is the highest anomaly in Indonesia, generally it can be grouped into 2 (two) units, that are 160 mGal up to 260 mGal anomaly groups formed low anomaly pattern, and 260 mGal up to 620 mGal anomaly groups formed high anomaly pattern. 0 mGal to 5 mGal residual anomaly formed high anomaly pattern, it is interpreted as anticline with diameter are 10-15 kilometers. The trap oil and gas structures of this area at Minaluli, Madafuhi, and Lekosula are near the location of oil and gas seepage, that is propose to explore and drill in that area. Whereas in Taliabu Island, Tolong, Pena, Samuya, and Jiko Gulf still need increasing datas. Reservoir rocks consist of sandstones and limestones of Tanamu Formations were Late Cretaceous age, that occupied the location of 0 mGal to 5 mGal residual anomaly with density 2.65 g/cm ³. Hostrock are Buya Formation are Middle Jurassic - Late Jurassic from black shales with density 2.71 g/cm³, and kitchen oil were formed in the area - 4 mGal to -28 mGal residual anomaly that formed low anomaly in the northern offshore of Mangole Island. Keyword: gravity, oil kitchen, basin, oil and gas, black shales, recidual anomaly, density, anticline, hostrocks.

2012 ◽  
Vol 183 (4) ◽  
pp. 307-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ugur Kagan Tekin ◽  
M. Cemal Göncüoglu ◽  
Seda Uzuncimen

Abstract The Bornova Flysch Zone (BFZ) in NW Anatolia comprises several olistoliths or tectonic slivers, representing various parts of the Izmir-Ankara ocean. Radiolarian assemblages extracted from one of the olistoliths of the BFZ, cropping out along the Sögütlü section, to the NE Manisa city, were studied in detail. The lowermost part of the section contains latest Bajocian – early Callovian radiolarian taxa, followed by radiolarian assemblages indicating Late Jurassic to early Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) ages. Previous studies reveal that the Izmir-Ankara oceanic basin was initially opened during late Ladinian – early Carnian. The new radiolarian data obtained from this olistolith reveals that relatively condensed, and possibly more or less continuous, pelagic sedimentation took place during the late Middle Jurassic to early Late Cretaceous in a non-volcanic oceanic basin closer to the Tauride-Anatolide platform margin.


1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. Laws ◽  
Gregory P. Kraus

The present structural configuration of the Bonaparte Gulf-Timor Sea area is essentially the result of Mesozoic and Tertiary fragmentation of a once relatively simple Permo-Triassic Basin. A northwest-southeast Palaeozoic structural grain in the southeastern portion of the area resulted from early Palaeozoic faulting, possibly tied to aborted rift development. This faulting effectively controlled sedimentation throughout the Phanerozoic. Pronounced northeast-southwest Jurassic to Tertiary structural trends dominate the central and northern area, paralleling the present edge of the continental shelf and swinging south southwest into the northern extension of the Browse Basin. Post-Palaeozoic epeirogenies which had the greatest effect on the regional structural pattern occurred in the mid-Jurassic, Early Cretaceous, within the Eocene and in the Plio-Pleistocene.The Kimberley and Sturt Blocks flanking the basin to the south and east constituted the most important source areas for clastic sedimentation throughout the Phanerozoic. Periodic contributions during the Mesozoic were derived from a postulated source to the northwest in the vicinity of the present-day Timor Trough.The maximum thickness of Phanerozoic sediments present within the Bonaparte Gulf-Timor Sea area exceeds 50,000 ft (15,000 m). Early Palaeozoic to Carboniferous evaporites, carbonates and clastics are unconformably overlain by a thick sequence of Permian deltaic sediments in the southeastern Bonaparte Gulf Basin. This is succeeded by a Triassic to Middle Jurassic transgressive-regressive clastic sequence, grading northwestward to marginal marine and marine clastics and carbonates. The Permian to mid-Jurassic sediments are unconformably overlain by Upper Jurassic sands and shales, mainly fluvial in the southeast and north, becoming more marine westward. These clastics are everywhere succeeded by a monotonous sequence of Cretaceous shales and shaly limestones followed by a generally north to northwesterly thickening wedge of Tertiary carbonates and minor elastics.Hydrocarbon shows have been noted offshore in rocks of Carboniferous, Permian, Late Jurassic, Late Cretaceous and Eocene age. Porous clastics in conjunction with thick and laterally-extensive, organically-rich shales are present within the Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sequences. These sediments, in association with fault- and diapir-related anomalies and stratigraphic plays, combine to make certain provinces of the Bonaparte Gulf-Timor Sea area prospective in the search for viable oil and gas reserves.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saultan Panjaitan ◽  
Subagio Subagio

Hasil penelitian gayaberat di Pulau Biak menghasilkan anomali gayaberat yang dikelompokkan kedalam 2 (dua) satuan yaitu anomali gayaberat 50 mGal hingga 120 mGal membentuk rendahan anomali mencerminkan cekungan. Kelompok anomali gayaberat 120 mGal hingga 220 mGal membentuk tinggian anomali. Pola tinggian anomali sisa 0 mGal hingga 2 mGal diduga sebagai perangkap struktur migas yang terdapat di daerah Kota Biak utara, Mandon dan lepas pantai timur P. Pai. Batuan bertahanan jenis rendah antara 0 - 16 Ohm-meter yang mengindikasikan batuan reservoir jenuh fluida terbentuk di kedalaman 2500 meter. Kedalaman batuan dasar terbentuk antara 7000-8500 meter, dengan rapat massa batuan 2.9 - 3.1 gr/cm3 bertahanan jenis tinggi 1000-8200 Ohm-meter diduga sebagai cerminan dari batuan ultramafik kerak samudera. Batuan yang menyusun di daerah penelitian terdiri atas lapisan batuan Tersier dengan rapat massa 2.45 gr/cm3, batuan Pra-Tersier dengan rapat massa 2.75 gr/cm3 dan batuan dasar dengan rapat massa 3.1 gr/cm3. Batuan sumber adalah serpih Formasi Makat berumur Miosen dengan rapat massa batuan 2.45 gr/cm3, sedangkan batuan reservoir terdiri dari batupasir Formasi Mamberamo. Kata kunci Gayaberat, cekungan, migas, anomali sisa, rapat massa, sesar, antiklin, batuan sumber, tahanan jenis. Gravity research on the island of Biak gravity anomalies are grouped into two (2) units is a gravity anomaly 50 mgal up to 120 mgal is basin reflecting. Gravity anomaly 120 mgal up to 220 mgal formed heights anaomaly. Altitude residual anomaly from 0 mGal to 2 mgal is oil and gas as trapping structures contained in the northern City of Biak, off the east coast Mandon and P. Pai. The rocks is of low resistivity between 0 -16 Ohm-meter that indicates the saturated fluid reservoir rocks are in the depths of 2500 meter. The depth of the bedrock formed between 7000-8500 meters, with density 2.9 - 3.1 gr / cm3 is heights resistivity types of 1000-8200 Ohm-meter interpreted as a reflection of ultramafic rocks oceanic crust. The rocks in the study area consists of Tertiary rocks layers with a density 2.45 gr / cm3, the Pre-Tertiary rocks with density 2.75 gr / cm3 and bedrock with density 3.1 gr / cm3. The source rocks is of shale from Makat Formation Miocene age with density 2.45 gr / cm3, and the reservoir rock consists of sandstone Mamberamo Formation. Keywords: Gravity, basin, oil and gas, recidual anomaly, density, fault, anticline, source rocks, resistivity.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Remi J.G. Charton

Our understanding of the Earth’s interior is limited by the access we have of its deep layers, while the knowledge we have of Earth’s evolution is restricted to harvested information from the present state of our planet. We therefore use proxies, physical and numerical models, and observations made on and from the surface of the Earth. The landscape results from a combination of processes operating at the surface and in the subsurface. Thus, if one knows how to read the landscape, one may unfold its geological evolution.In the past decade, numerous studies have documented km-scale upward and downward vertical movements in the continental rifted margins of the Atlantic Ocean and in their hinterlands. These movements, described as exhumation (upward) and subsidence (downward), have been labelled as “unpredicted” and/or “unexpected”. ‘Unpredicted’ because conceptual, physical, and numerical models that we dispose of for the evolution of continental margins do not generally account for these relatively recent observations. ‘Unexpected’ because the km-scale vertical movements occurred when our record of the geological history is insufficient to support them. As yet, the mechanisms responsible for the km-scale vertical movements remain enigmatic.One of the common techniques used by geoscientists to investigate the past kinematics of the continental crust is to couple ‘low-temperature thermochronology’ and ‘time-temperature modelling’. In Morocco alone, over twenty studies were conducted following this approach. The reason behind this abundance of studies and the related enthusiasm of researchers towards Moroccan geology is due to its puzzling landscapes and complex history. In this Thesis, we investigate unconstrained aspects of the km-scale vertical movements that occurred in Morocco and its surroundings (Canary Islands, Algeria, Mali, and Mauritania). The transition area between generally subsiding domains and mostly exhuming domains, yet poorly understood, is discussed via the evolution of a profile, running across the rifted continental margin (chapter 2). Low-temperature thermochronology data from the central Morocco coastal area document a km-scale exhumation between the Permian and the Early/Middle Jurassic. The related erosion fed sediments to the subsiding Mesozoic basin to the northwest. Basement rocks along the transect were subsequently buried between the Late Jurassic and the Early Cretaceous. From late Early/Late Cretaceous onwards, rocks present along the transect were exhumed to their present-day position.The post-Variscan thermal and geological history of the Anti-Atlas belt in central Morocco is constrained with a transect constructed along strike of the belt (chapter 3). The initial episode occurred in the Late Triassic and led to a km-scale exhumation of crustal rocks by the end of the Middle Jurassic. The following phase was characterised by basement subsidence and occurred during the Late Jurassic and most of the Early Cretaceous. The basement rocks were then slowly brought to the surface after experiencing a km-scale exhumation throughout the Late Cretaceous and the Cenozoic. The exhumation episodes extended into the interior of the African tectonic plate, perhaps beyond the sampled belt itself. Exhumation rates and fluxes of material eroded from the hinterlands of the Moroccan rifted margin were quantified from the Permian (chapter 4). The high denudation rates, obtained in central Morocco during the Early to Middle Jurassic and in northern Morocco during the Neogene, are comparable to values typical of rift flank, domal, or structural uplifts. These are obtained in central Morocco during the Early to Middle Jurassic and in northern Morocco during the Neogene. Exhumation rates for other periods in northern to southern Morocco average around ‘normal’ denudation values. Periods of high production of sediments in the investigated source areas are the Permian, the Jurassic, the Early Cretaceous, and the NeogeneThe Phanerozoic evolution of source-to-sink systems in Morocco and surroundings is illustrated in several maps (chapter 5). Substantial shifts in the source areas were evidenced between the central and northern Moroccan domains during the Middle-Late Jurassic and between the Meseta and the Anti-Atlas during the Early-Late Cretaceous. Finally, the mechanisms responsible for the onset and subsistence of the unpredicted km-scale vertical movements are discussed (chapter 6). We propose that a combination of the large-scale crustal folding, mantle-driven dynamic topography, and thermal subsidence, superimposed to changes in climates, sea level and erodibility of the exposed rocks, were crucial to the timing, amplitude, and style of the observed vertical movements.The km-scale vertical movements will continue to be studied for years to come. Expectantly, this Thesis will deliver sufficiently robust grounds for further elaborated and integrated studies in Morocco and beyond.


2006 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
O.A. Abbink ◽  
H.F. Mijnlieff ◽  
D.K. Munsterman ◽  
R.M.C.H. Verreussel

AbstractMiddle Jurassic - Early Cretaceous strata are a target for oil and gas exploration in the Dutch offshore. During the initial stages of the ‘Late Jurassic’ offshore exploration, various oil fields and a few gas fields were discovered of which only one, the F3-FB field, proved to be economically viable. In the Northern Offshore of the Netherlands, latest Middle Jurassic (Callovian) - earliest Cretaceous (Ryazanian) strata are mostly limited to the Dutch Central Graben and Terschelling basins. Outside the Dutch Central Graben and the Terschelling Basin only thin veneers of these strata occur on the fringing highs such as the Schill Grund High and the Step Graben. The geology of this non-marine to shallow marine succession is complex. The combination of lateral facies changes, repetitive log and facies characteristics in time, sea-level and climate changes, salt tectonics and structural compartmentalisation hamper straightforward seismic interpretation and log correlation. The large number of lithostratigraphic units defined in the Stratigraphic Nomenclature of the Netherlands illustrates the complexity of this time-interval.In recent years, new biostratigraphic techniques and newly acquired stratigraphic data led to the identification of a series of events which can be related to the tectonic, climatic, environmental and stratigraphic development of the ‘Late Jurassic’ in the Dutch Central Graben and Terschelling basins. Based on these data, three stratigraphic sequences can be recognized. Sequence 1 (Callovian - earliest Kimmeridgian) records the initiation of the Dutch Central Graben, Sequence 2 (early Kimmeridgian - early Portlandian) that of the initiation of the Terschelling Basin. During sequence 3 (late Portlandian - Ryazanian) the Dutch offshore was draped by a regional transgression. These insights have directly impact on the exploration potential, which is discussed in two play concepts. The first is a strat-trap play in the fluvial/paralic sediments of Sequence 1 in the lows between the graben boundary and salt domes. The second example is the Spiculite play, which comprises a bioclastic sandstone reservoir at the top of a dome with a 4-way dip closure. These two examples highlight the necessity of understanding the paleoenvironment and geography for assessing the future exploration potential.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 2002-2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale A. Russell

Dinosaurian biogeography may have been largely controlled by the Mesozoic fragmentation of Pangea and the reassembly of its fragments into a new, boreal supercontinent (Laurasia). Although Late Triassic and Early Jurassic dinosaurs were globally distributed, Chinese assemblages were dominated by endemic forms from Middle Jurassic into Early Cretaceous time. The affinities of Aptian – Albian immigrants to Asia were strongest with North America and Europe rather than Gondwana, indicating that the northern and southern hemispheres had by then attained their biogeographic identity. This distinctiveness was maintained through Cretaceous time. Europe seems to have been a buffer area between Paleolaurasia and Gondwana; of the northern continents it was the most strongly influenced by Gondwana dispersants. Late Jurassic dinosaur assemblages in North America exhibited Gondwana affinities, but by Late Cretaceous time they were dominated by forms of Asian ancestry.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872110124
Author(s):  
Cunjian Zhang ◽  
Jingdong Liu ◽  
Youlu Jiang

Overpressure is one of the most important factors for oil and gas charging in petroliferous basins. Research on overpressure evolution and its formation mechanisms is of great significance for predicting formation pressures in oil and gas reservoirs before drilling. However, research methods addressing overpressure evolution are not without issues. Based on the measured formation pressures and fluid inclusions, the evolution of the formation pressures in the Xujiahe Formation in the northeast part of the Sichuan Basin was investigated by PVT and basin simulations and the causes of overpressure were also analyzed. The results show that overpressure in the continental strata began to develop at the bottom of the Middle Jurassic Shaximiao Formation. The pressure coefficients of the Upper Triassic Xujiahe Formation range from 1.01 to 1.90, and belong to the normal pressure and overpressure regimes. The present-day overpressure of the Xujiahe Formation is mainly caused by hydrocarbon generation and tectonic compression. The tight reservoirs are conducive to the formation and preservation of overpressure. The pressures in the Xujiahe Formation experienced two evolution processes, namely an “increase-decrease-increase” (eastern area) process and an “increase-decrease” (western area) process. Overpressure began to develop in the Middle Jurassic(J2) period. Due to the hydrocarbon generation taking place, the formation pressures increased rapidly from the Middle Jurassic(J2) period to the early Late Cretaceous (the early part of K2) period. The degree of development of overpressure in the western part of the study area was greater than that in the eastern part of the study during the critical charging period (J3–K1). Since the early Late Cretaceous, the formation pressure has gradually decreased due to tectonic uplift and erosion. From the Oligocene (E3) period to the present, the formation pressures have increased again in local areas due to tectonic compression.


2017 ◽  
Vol 155 (2) ◽  
pp. 298-315 ◽  
Author(s):  
GISELLA REBAY ◽  
DAVIDE ZANONI ◽  
ANTONIO LANGONE ◽  
PIETRO LUONI ◽  
MASSIMO TIEPOLO ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Zermatt-Saas Zone was part of the Middle to Late Jurassic Tethyan lithosphere that underwent oceanic metamorphism during Mesozoic time and subduction during Eocene time (HP to UHP metamorphism). In upper Valtournanche, serpentinite, metarodingite and eclogite record a dominant S2 foliation that developed under 2.5±0.3 GPa and 600±20°C during Alpine subduction. Serpentinites contain clinopyroxene and rare zircon porphyroclasts. Clinopyroxene porphyroclasts show fringes within S2 with similar compositions to that of grains defining S2. Zircon cores show zoning typical of magmatic growth and thin fringes parallel to the S2 foliation. These features indicate crystallization of clinopyroxene and zircon fringes during HP syn-D2 metamorphism, related to the Alpine subduction. The U–Pb zircon dates for cores and fringes reveal crystallization at 165±3.2 Ma and 65.5±5.6 Ma, respectively. The Middle Jurassic dates are in agreement with the known ages for the oceanic accretion of the Tethyan lithosphere. The Late Cretaceaous - Paleocene dates suggest that the Zermatt-Saas Zone experienced high-pressure to ultra-high-pressure (HP–UHP) metamorphism at c. 16 Ma earlier than previously reported. This result is in agreement with the evidence that in the Western Alps the continental Sesia-Lanzo Zone reached the subduction climax at least from 70 Ma and was exhumed during ongoing oceanic subduction. Our results are further evidence that the Zermatt-Saas ophiolites diachronically recorded heterogeneous HP–UHP metamorphism.


Author(s):  
Lars Stemmerik ◽  
Gregers Dam ◽  
Nanna Noe-Nygaard ◽  
Stefan Piasecki ◽  
Finn Surlyk

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Stemmerik, L., Dam, G., Noe-Nygaard, N., Piasecki, S., & Surlyk, F. (1998). Sequence stratigraphy of source and reservoir rocks in the Upper Permian and Jurassic of Jameson Land, East Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 180, 43-54. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v180.5085 _______________ Approximately half of the hydrocarbons discovered in the North Atlantic petroleum provinces are found in sandstones of latest Triassic – Jurassic age with the Middle Jurassic Brent Group, and its correlatives, being the economically most important reservoir unit accounting for approximately 25% of the reserves. Hydrocarbons in these reservoirs are generated mainly from the Upper Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay and its correlatives with additional contributions from Middle Jurassic coal, Lower Jurassic marine shales and Devonian lacustrine shales. Equivalents to these deeply buried rocks crop out in the well-exposed sedimentary basins of East Greenland where more detailed studies are possible and these basins are frequently used for analogue studies (Fig. 1). Investigations in East Greenland have documented four major organic-rich shale units which are potential source rocks for hydrocarbons. They include marine shales of the Upper Permian Ravnefjeld Formation (Fig. 2), the Middle Jurassic Sortehat Formation and the Upper Jurassic Hareelv Formation (Fig. 4) and lacustrine shales of the uppermost Triassic – lowermost Jurassic Kap Stewart Group (Fig. 3; Surlyk et al. 1986b; Dam & Christiansen 1990; Christiansen et al. 1992, 1993; Dam et al. 1995; Krabbe 1996). Potential reservoir units include Upper Permian shallow marine platform and build-up carbonates of the Wegener Halvø Formation, lacustrine sandstones of the Rhaetian–Sinemurian Kap Stewart Group and marine sandstones of the Pliensbachian–Aalenian Neill Klinter Group, the Upper Bajocian – Callovian Pelion Formation and Upper Oxfordian – Kimmeridgian Hareelv Formation (Figs 2–4; Christiansen et al. 1992). The Jurassic sandstones of Jameson Land are well known as excellent analogues for hydrocarbon reservoirs in the northern North Sea and offshore mid-Norway. The best documented examples are the turbidite sands of the Hareelv Formation as an analogue for the Magnus oil field and the many Paleogene oil and gas fields, the shallow marine Pelion Formation as an analogue for the Brent Group in the Viking Graben and correlative Garn Group of the Norwegian Shelf, the Neill Klinter Group as an analogue for the Tilje, Ror, Ile and Not Formations and the Kap Stewart Group for the Åre Formation (Surlyk 1987, 1991; Dam & Surlyk 1995; Dam et al. 1995; Surlyk & Noe-Nygaard 1995; Engkilde & Surlyk in press). The presence of pre-Late Jurassic source rocks in Jameson Land suggests the presence of correlative source rocks offshore mid-Norway where the Upper Jurassic source rocks are not sufficiently deeply buried to generate hydrocarbons. The Upper Permian Ravnefjeld Formation in particular provides a useful source rock analogue both there and in more distant areas such as the Barents Sea. The present paper is a summary of a research project supported by the Danish Ministry of Environment and Energy (Piasecki et al. 1994). The aim of the project is to improve our understanding of the distribution of source and reservoir rocks by the application of sequence stratigraphy to the basin analysis. We have focused on the Upper Permian and uppermost Triassic– Jurassic successions where the presence of source and reservoir rocks are well documented from previous studies. Field work during the summer of 1993 included biostratigraphic, sedimentological and sequence stratigraphic studies of selected time slices and was supplemented by drilling of 11 shallow cores (Piasecki et al. 1994). The results so far arising from this work are collected in Piasecki et al. (1997), and the present summary highlights the petroleum-related implications.


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