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Basin Profile

The document discusses different methods of classifying sedimentary basins based on their tectonic setting and characteristics. It describes several basin classification schemes and examples of different basin types, including their distinguishing features, depositional histories, potential reservoirs, sources, seals, traps, and hydrocarbon characteristics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
148 views

Basin Profile

The document discusses different methods of classifying sedimentary basins based on their tectonic setting and characteristics. It describes several basin classification schemes and examples of different basin types, including their distinguishing features, depositional histories, potential reservoirs, sources, seals, traps, and hydrocarbon characteristics.

Uploaded by

Risky
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Petroleum Geology

Lecture #4

• Basin classification
• Habitat of petroleum
in sedimentary basins

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Basin classification - introduction
• About 600 sedimentary basins in the • Many basin classification schemes has
world been proposed over the years and below
• About 25% of the basins (covering are some examples:
about 50% of the area taken up by – Bally & Snelson, 1980
sedimentary basins) are producing – Klemme, 1980
petroleum today – Stoneley, 1981
– Kingston, Dishroon & Williams, 1983
• Basin classification is large scale
discrimination of basins based in part • More recent classification schemes tend
on: to have fewer classes of basin types and
– sedimentation and tectonic regimes incorporate a classification of global
– petroleum characteristics source rocks to locate “Mega Petroleum
Systems”:
• Classification of basin types help in the – Klemme and Ulmishek, 1990
evaluation process prior to acquiring – Klemme, 1994
acreage in new areas and in planning
exploration activities:
– evaluate what productive horizons a
sedimentary basin may contain
– evaluate where productive horizons
may be broadly located in a
sedimentary basin

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Bally and Snelson, 1980
• Three families of basins are
differentiated:

– Basins on rigid lithosphere not associated


with formation of megasutures:
• rifts
• Atlantic type passive margins
• cratonic basins

– Perisutural basins on rigid lithosphere


associated with formation of
compressional megasuture:
• Deep-sea trenches
• Foredeeps
• Chinese type basins

– Episutural basins located and mostly


contained in compressional megasuture:
• forearc basins
• backarc basins
• episutural megashear systems such
as California-type basins

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Klemme, 1980
• Basins are differentiated in
terms of their architectural
characteristics:
– size
– shape
– effective basement profile or
cross section
– surface area to volume ratio
Then related to:
– earth’s crust
– tectonic setting
– basin evolution in the
framework of plate tectonics

• 8 major basins types are


recognized :
1) Interior simple
2) Composite
3) Rift
4) Downwarp
5) Pull-apart
6) Subduction
7) Median
8) Delta

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Kingston, Dishroon & Williams, 1983

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Selley and Morrill, 1983

• Combines the schemes of Huff


(1978, 1980) and Klemme
(1980)
• 10 basin types are identified:
– 2 basin types related to stable
continental plates
– 2 basin types related to plate
divergence
– 4 basin types related to plate
convergence
– 2 basin types that downwarp
into small oceans form a
separate class

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Interior basins
Williston Basin
Intracratonic sag
• Distinguishing features:
– simple
– single cycle
– no uplands
– in continental interiors
• Depositional history:
– mature, shallow water or marine sediments
(clastic or carbonate prone)
– non-depositional or non-marine late stage
• Reservoir:
– equally sandstone or carbonate
• Source:
– shale
• Hydrocarbons:
• Cap:
– low S, high gravity crude
– shale - less commonly evaporite
– low natural gas
• Trap:
• Risk:
– basement uplift arches and anticlines
– adequate traps
– combination and stratigraphic traps
– presence of shale for source and cap
• Geothermal gradient:
– low to normal

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Foreland basins

Craton margin, composite


• Distinguishing features:
– multy cycle basin on craton edge with
adjacent uplift
• Depositional history:
– 1st cycle mature platform sediments
– 2nd cycle orogenic clastics
• Reservoir:
– mostly sandstone lesser carbonates in
both cycles
• Source:
– overlying or interfingering shale
– locally coal
• Cap:
– shale or evaporite • Hydrocarbons:
• Geothermal gradient – mixed crude, similar to interior
– low to above average basins in 1st cycle
– above average deep thermal gas
• Risks:
– trap efficiency
– reservoir
– source and seal development

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Rift basins
Rift basin
• Distinguishing features
– downdropped graben over continental
crust
– dormant divergence
• Depositional history
– pre-rift rocks sedimentary, metamorphic
or granitic
– post-rift fill is restricted facies, initially
non-marine that may become marine
(either clastic or carbonate prone)
• Reservoir
– equally sanstone or carbonate; of pre- and
post-rift cycles
• Source
– overlying or lateral facies shale
• Cap
– basinwide evaporites or thick shales
• Trap
– horst block anticlines
– combination traps related to high blocks • Hydrocarbons
– tilted fault blocks – highly facies-dependent (paraffinic with sandstones;
aromatic with carbonates)
• Geothermal gradient – low to average gas
– normal to high
• Risks
– small trap size
– too high thermal gradient
– source rock development

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Pull-apart basin
Passive margin, divergent margin
• Distinguishing features
– coastal half-grabens down-faulted seaward
– intermediate crust
– result of ocean-floor spreading
• Depositional history
– non-marine rift stage sediments
– restricted facies (carbonates, evaporites, black
shale) in early separation
– prograding clastic wedge in late separation
stage
• Reservoir
– sandstone in all three stages
– some limestine in early separation stage
• Source
– overlying and interfingering shale
• Cap
– shale or evaporite
• Trap • Hydrocarbons
– horst block, salt flow. roll-over and drape – rift stage has parafinic, intermediate gravity crude
anticlines – more aromatic, higher gravity in separation stage
– stratigraphic and combination – gas-prone
• Geothermal gradient • Risks
– below average in marine stages – kerogen maturation
– biodegradation
– pre-separation source rock
– post-separation reservoirs

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Downwarp basins
Downwarp bains
A Open - related to pull-apart, passive margins
B Closed - related to foreland basins
C Trough - related to foreland basins
• Destinguishing features
– basement and depositional downwarp dipping
into small oceans, inland seas or linear suture
zones
– intermediate crust
• Depositional history
– mixed, interfingering shallow marine facies,
either carbonate or clsatic-prone
• Reservoir
– carbonate (C) or mixed (A,B) with sandstone
(A) or carbonate (B) dominant
• Source
– overlying, interfingering and basin-center
shales
– limestone and marls important in B
• Cap
• Hydrocarbons
– mostly shale
– intermediate to mixed gravity crudes
– both shale and evaporites in B
– sandstones more paraffinic, carbonates more aromatic
• Trap – average to high natural gas
– anticlines
• Risks
– salt flow
– low
– combination
– similar to pull-apart (A) and foreland (B,C)
– reefs, pinch-outs and unconformities
• Geothermal gradient
– normal to above average

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Back-arc/fore-arc basins
Convergent margin basins
A fore-arc
B back-arc
C non-arc (strike-slip, California type)
D collision (median, intermontane, successor)
• Distinguishing features
– small, deep, yong
– local extension and strike-slip in regional
compression along convergent plate margins
• Depositional history
– immature poorly sorted clastic sediments
– rapidly intertonguing facies
– shallow to deep and/or volcaniclastic
• Reservoir
– thick sandstones, often multple
– minor reefal limestone
• Source
– abundant thick interbedded shale • Hydrocarbons
• Cap – mostly parafinic to paranic-naphtenic
– shale – variable gravity
• Trap – low natural gas
– drape and compression anticlines • Risks
– strike-slip and thrust structures – maturation
– reefs – leakage
– horst-related combination – deformation too intense
• Geothermal gradient – igneous activity
– low (A), high (B,C), or normal to high (D) – poor reservoir properties

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


Tertiary deltas
Tertiary deltas
• Distinguishing features
– circular depocenter basin
– on plate triple junction where failed arm rift
meets ocean basin, particularly at divergent or
transcurrent margin
• Depositional history
– prograding wedge of land-derived clastics with
type III kerogen
• Reservoir
– sandstone (pro-delta facies)
• Source
– shale
• Cap
– shale
• Trap
– roll-over anticlines, growth faults, mud or salt
diapirs
– sand lences
• Geothermal gradient • Hydrocarbons
– low – paraffinic to paraffinic-naphthenic crude
– very high natural gas
• Risks
– small trap size
– adequate caprock

Lecture: 4 © 1998 René O. Thomsen


End of Lecture

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