Title of article :
Structural controls on Quaternary deepwater sedimentation, mud diapirism, and hydrocarbon distribution within the actively evolving Columbus foreland basin, eastern offshore Trinidad
Author/Authors :
Garciacaro، نويسنده , , Emilio and Escalona، نويسنده , , Alejandro and Mann، نويسنده , , Paul and Wood، نويسنده , , Lesli and Moscardelli، نويسنده , , Lorena and Sullivan، نويسنده , , Sean، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Eastward migration of the Caribbean plate relative to the South American plate has caused lithospheric loading along the northern margin of South America, which is recorded by an 1100-km-long foreland basin which is oldest in the west (Maracaibo basin, 65–55 Ma) and youngest in the east (Columbus basin, eastern offshore Trinidad, 15–0 Ma). The Orinoco River has been the primary source of sediment for the basin since early Miocene. We have integrated approximately 775 km of deep-penetration 2D seismic lines acquired in the area of eastern offshore Trinidad as part of the 2004 “Broadband Ocean-Land Investigations of Venezuela and the Antilles arc Region” (BOLIVAR) project, 8000 km2 of shallow industry 3D seismic data, and published industry well data from offshore eastern Trinidad. Active mud diapirism in the Columbus basin is widespread and is related to overthrusting and tectono-sedimentary loading of upper Miocene-lower Pliocene age mud. Analysis of the shallow 3D seismic data reveals the presence of extensive gravity-flow depositional elements on the Columbus basin slope and the deepwater area. These stacked gravity-flow deposits are characterized by mass-transport deposits at the base, turbidite frontal-splay deposits, leveed-channel deposits, and capped by fine-grained condensed-section deposits. Exploration targets in the deepwater area are located towards the center of the Columbus basin, where northeast-trending fault-propagation folds are important Plio-Pleistocene trap-forming elements. Deep basin wells drilled in recent years have proven that turbidites were transported into the deepwater Columbus basin during the Plio-Pleistocene. Analysis of these well results suggests that a deeper oil charge is present within the deepwater Columbus basin area. The primary uncertainty for this variable hydrocarbon system is whether fault or diapiric pathways connect or divert the petroleum charge at depth with shallower reservoir rocks.
Keywords :
3D seismic survey , Submarine slides , Mass-transport complexes , Sequence stratigraphy , Trinidad , Hydrocarbons , Orinoco delta , Caribbean
Journal title :
Marine and Petroleum Geology
Journal title :
Marine and Petroleum Geology