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Structural and Stratigraphic Development of Extensional Basins: A Case Study Offshore Deepwater Sarawak and Northwest Sabah, Malaysia*
By
Kenneth Thies1, Mansor Ahmad2, Hamdan Mohamad2, Richard Bischke1, Jeffrey Boyer3, and Daniel Tearpock1
Search and Discovery Article #10103 (2006)
Posted May 10, 2006
*Modified from extended abstract prepared for presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Calgary, Alberta, June 19-22, 2005. For other information about the general area, the viewer is referred to Malaysia's Gas Resources, by Khalid Ngah, Search and Discovery Article #10002 (1999).
1 Subsurface Consultants & Associates, LLC, Houston, Texas ([email protected])
2 Petronas Scn Bhn, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
3Katy, Texas
An integrated structure, stratigraphy, and basin modeling study of deepwater portion of offshore Sarawak and northwest Sabah Basin was undertaken in a joint project between Petronas Scn Bhn and Subsurface Consultants & Associates, LLC, with the objective of improving the present understanding of the structural development, regional tectonics, sequence stratigraphic history, paleodepositional environments, and overall hydrocarbon potential of these basins. The study utilized a reprocessed regional grid of approximately 10,000 line kilometers of 2-D seismic data, selected deep wells, and high-resolution biostratigraphy control. This paper deals with the structural development of the extensional, half-graben, sub-basins that dominate the Eocene to Middle Miocene section and with how the development of these half-grabens can be related to the regional and local tectonic and stratigraphic history.
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Plate Tectonic History of the Region
As a result of the hydrocarbon potential of
this region, much research has been done on the plate tectonic history
of the overall South China With continued extension, through Oligocene time these micro-plates approached the continental block of Kalimantan as the lead edge of the micro-plates was subducted below the Kalimantan continental block. This active seafloor spreading promoted extensional movement along these half-graben-bounding faults.
The continued southeastward drift of the
Luconian and Dangerous Grounds Blocks (Figure 1)
eventually led to a collision of these blocks with the Kalimantan Block,
first by the Luconian Block about Middle Oligocene time and subsequently
by the Dangerous Grounds block by Middle Miocene time. With the
collision of these plates the extensional or growth Intense rifting during the rift-drift transition has created a series of characteristic asymmetric wedge-shaped half-grabens. These half-grabens are bounded by both normal faults and large-scale listric faults, which expand the stratigraphic section and often appear to sole-out at depth. The sedimentary section contained within these half-grabens is the primary focus of the petroleum potential in this deepwater area.
Intense rifting during the rift-drift transition has created a series of characteristic asymmetric wedge-shaped half-grabens. These half-grabens are bounded by both normal faults and large-scale listric faults, which expand the stratigraphic section and often appear to sole-out at depth. The sedimentary section contained within these half-grabens is the primary focus of the petroleum potential in this deepwater area. Figure 2 is a NW-SE oriented seismic profile 95 kilometers long, which illustrates the common structural form of the North Luconia Province. Here you can see the edge of the Middle to Upper Miocene Luconia Platform and the wedge of Upper Miocene to Plio-Pleistocene bathyal sediments above the regional Mid Miocene Unconformity (MMU) dated at approximately 16 Ma. Below the MMU lies a series of tilted half-grabens which appear best developed close to the Luconia Platform margin and less well developed or less well preserved, farther from the margin.
Figure 3 shows the
typical form of a half-graben with a large controlling listric fault on
the SE margin. This listric fault flattens out with depth and in this
case continues upwards to the
Deposition and Rates of Fault Movement Slip rates on the bounding listric fault surfaces are highly variable but slip rates of up to 43 cm/1000 years have been calculated from depth corrected and structurally balanced models of the half-grabens. During this same time interval sedimentation rates observed in wells were averaging 10 to 20 cm/1000 years. The low sedimentation rates of about 10 cm/1000 years indicate two things:
There is clearly a strong tectonic overprint on the stratigraphy of the half-grabens.
Several authors have since looked at the
specific question of sequence stratigraphic concepts as they relate to
tectonically active fault-bounded asymmetric grabens where the tectonic
effects may outweigh the eustatic effects. In these settings it may not
be possible to identify the eustatically controlled
Rift Basin Infill Stratigraphy Prosser (1993) examined how extensional rift basins are infilled and proposed a four-fold division of rift evolution. The four stages are rift initiation, rift climax, immediate post-rift, and late post-rift.
At the time of the Orange horizon (Figure
4), fault displacement increased resulting in a new rift climax
The extensional half-grabens of the deepwater
Sarawak and Sabah area are primarily composed of two or more regressive
cycles of rift infill strongly influenced by regional tectonics. The
first is related to early extension and rift development from
approximately 43 Ma until 30 Ma and the second is related to the period
between the initiation of
Gawthorpe, R.L., Fraser, A.J., and Collier, R.E., 1994. Sequence stratigraphy in active extensional basins: Implications for the interpretation of ancient basinfills. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 11, p. 642-658. Holloway, N.H., 1982, North Palawan block, Philippines—Its relation to
Asian mainland and role in
evolution of South China Howell, J.A., and Flint, S.S., 1996. A model for high resolution sequence stratigraphy within extensional basins. High Resolution Sequence Stratigraphy – Innovations and Applications, Geological Society Spec. Publ. 104, p. 129-137. Madon, M.B.Hj., 1999a, Plate tectonic elements and evolution of Southeast Asia, The Petroleum Geology and Resources of Malaysia: Chapter 4, Petronas, p. 59-76.
Prosser, S., 1993.
Rift-related linked
depositional Taylor, B., and Hayes, D.E., 1980, The tectonic evolution of southeast Asian seas and islands: AGU Geophysical Monograph, p. 89-104. |