Abstract: Visualization of the Relationship
Between Changing Paleogeography
of the South Atlantic and Hydrocarbon Play
Element Evolution
Norton, Ian O.; Smith, P. R.; Swanson, W. A.; Creaney, S. - Exxon Exploration Company
In any hydrocarbon system there are strong
links between tectonic evolution, drainage patterns and eustacy. Interplay
between these large-scale geologic factors leads to variations in critical
hydrocarbon play elements. We illustrate some aspects of this interplay
using an analysis of the South Atlantic. Results are presented in a series
of paleogeographic maps that incorporate data from both the African and
South American margins. Computer animation and morphing of the paleogeography
are used to better visualize evolutionary changes. Integration of data
from both sides allows use of data from one margin to complement data from
the opposite side where coverage may not be as good. Initial rifting in
the South Atlantic was strongly asymmetric, as was the final break to oceanic
crust. This led to preservation of syn-rift source rocks in wide rift zones
on one side of the Atlantic where the conjugate margin may have barely
any rift section remaining (e.g., Gabon versus Sergipe Alagoas). Effective
source richness increases to the south through the whole basin, which we
interpret as a consequence of syn-rift drainage patterns that produced
fluvial sediment in the north, thereby diluting the lacustrine source rock.
Initially rapid sea floor spreading resulted in for rapid subsidence and
cooling of the rift and early post-rift section, increasing chance of source
preservation. Source rock preserved in this manner was finally heated to
maturity during the Tertiary, when uplift of both Africa and South America
resulted in deposition of large volumes of clastics and deep burial of
the source rocks.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90933©1998 ABGP/AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil