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Sedimentary Basin
A depression in the crust of the earth, caused by plate tectonic activity and subsidence, in which sediments accumulates Mechanically, it is formed by deformation of the lithosphere (stretching, cooling, or bending)
Three Factors of Basins
1. Basin-forming tectonics 2. Depositional sequences 3. Basin-modifying tectonics
Sedimentary Basis Stats
600 sedimentary basins 25% covering 50% of the area are producing petroleum
Basin Classifications
More recent have fewer classes, incorporate global source rocks to find "Mega Petroleum Systems"
Wilson cycle
sequence of rifting, passive margin formation, subduction and volcanic arc formation, ocean closure, continent-continent collision
rift basins distinguishing features
underlain by continental crust extensional structural styles rapid syn-rift subsidence
Rift Basin Depositional History
Syn-rift rocks: post rift fill is restricted facies, initially non marine that may become marine
rift basin reservoirs
equally sandstone or carbonate
Rift Basin Source Rocks ans Seals
Source: marine shales Seals: Evaporites or thick shales
Rift Basin Traps
Anticline, combination, or tilted faults
Rift Basin Geothermal Gradient
normal to high
Rift Basin Petroleum and Risk Factors
Highly facies dependent oil with low to average gas Risks include small trap size, high thermal gradient, and source rock development
Intracratonic Sag Basins
-located in continental interiors -shallow waters or marine facies -equally sandstone or carbonate -source/seal rock - shales -high gravity crude/ low nat. gas
Passive (Divergent) Margins
-Rifted basement beneath thick sediment wedge - start as intracontinental rifts that continue to seafloor spreading -reservoir - Sandstone, some limestone -Marine shale source, shale/evaporite seal -Gas prone, parafinic intermediate gravity crude, aromatic higher gravity in separation …
Strike Slip Basins
-Formed in a variety of settings -Small, structurally complex -Best known from intracontinental/continental margin environments -Can be termed "hot basins" near mantle, cold with no mantle involvement
some characteristics of stike-slip fault-related basins
very rapid subsidence thick stratigraphic section relative to basin area very rapid deposition extreme facies variability time-temperature evolution may not be sufficient for source rock maturation
backarc & forearc basins
small, deep, young immature poorly sorted clastic sediments shallow to deep volcaniclastic res - thick sandstone, seal/source - thick, interbedded shale Mostly parafanic to paranic-nephtenic w/ low natural gas
Forearc Basin
A sedimentary basin between the subduction complex and the volcanic arc
backarc basin
basin behind volcanic arc
foreland basin
underlain by continental crust, bordered on one side by fold-and-thrust belt -asymmetric in cross section -depositional history - Early deep water facies, later shallow-marine to fluvial-deltaic facies -Mostly sandstone reservoirs Marine Shale source, shale/evaporite seal -…
Downwarp foreland basin depositional history
MIxed interfingering shallow marine facies, either carbonate or clastic prone
Craton margin foreland basin depositional history
1st cycle mature platform sediments, 2nd cycle organic clastics
Oil and Gas in Middle East
Three quarters of world oil reserves

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