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Shelf Delta to Deepwater Basin: A Depositional Model for Krishna-Godavari Basin*
By
Ravi Bastia1, Prasanta Nayak1, and Pankaj Singh1
Search and Discover Article #40231 (2007)
Posted February 21, 2007
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for presentation at AAPG International Conference, Perth, West Australia, November 5-8, 2006
1Reliance Industries Ltd., Mumbai, India ([email protected])
Krishna-Godavari basin, located on east coast of India, is in a passive-margin setting with a lateral (coastal) extent of 500 km, and it extends more than 200 km from the coast into the deep sea. This basin has been fed dominantly by Krishna and Godavari river systems, along with numerous tributaries. The basin represents a depositional setting of a well defined shelf to shelf-edge delta to deepwater. The area is adequately covered by several vintages of 2D and focused 3D seismic data which have been primarily used for subsurface imaging. Further, the depositional units have been identified by interpreting seismic stratal patterns and facies distribution in a sequence stratigraphic framework. This is supplemented by information from wireline logs and cores. The gradational facies pattern, sequence boundary, transgressive surface, maximum flooding surface, channel architecture, etc. have been demonstrated in selected seismic sections for developing the concept. The study is not only useful in understanding the depositional processes in shelf/shelf-edge/deepwater and their linkages but also as a good guide for the deepwater hydrocarbon exploration targets.
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Figures 1-4
The Krishna-Godavari basin (KG basin)
along the east coast of India (Figure 1)
covers the deltaic and interdeltaic areas of Krishna and Godavari
rivers and extends into the offshore. This stretch of sedimentary
tract contains a vast range of geologic settings, such as costal
basin, delta, shelf-slope apron, deep-sea channel, and deepwater fan
The basin was a major intracratonic rift within Gondwanaland until Early Jurassic. Exposures of Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks demarcate the basin margin toward the northwest (Rao, 2001). Onshore parts in the basin record a good account of Gondwana sediments. The basin evolved as a composite of rifted grabens, beginning in Late Jurassic, and formed a part of the development of the east coast divergent margin. The horsts and grabens were separated by vertical or steeply dipping faults. Since the Cretaceous, the basin has become a pericratonic rift basin. The initial rifting-drifting phase during this time generated fluvio-lacustrine sediments all over the basin. However, the transportation was over short distances, and therefore clastics of that time are devoid of sorting and are mainly argillaceous arkosic sandstones. The first marine incursion appears to have occurred during the Albian. The rift phase terminated by the end of Turonian in most parts of the basin, and subsequently, the post-rift sedimentary sequences prograded to the east with development of a continental shelf-slope system. The shelf areas received deposits of clastics and carbonate sediments while the slope registered deeper-water fan sediments. This setting, during which progradation was dominant, persisted throughout the Tertiary. The Paleocene and Eocene, in part, are considered to have been deposited during sea-level lowstands, thus forming fan complexes. From Oligocene onward, sea level began to rise, and more accommodation was available.
In the Tertiary, the deepwater area became
The regional basement horsts (Bapatla, Tanuku, Kaza-Kaikalur, Kavali, Nellore and Nayudupeta) divide Krishna-Godavari basin into several sub-basins such as Pennar, Krishna, West Godavari, and East Godavari (Figure 2). These sub-basins contain thick Cretaceous and older sediments above the Archaean basement, with several intervening unconformities. The basin contains a 4-7-km-thick sediment column, ranging in age from Late Carboniferous to Holocene (Figure 3).
Sequence Stratigraphic Framework Sequence stratigraphic framework indicates that, during lowstand period, sediments on the shelf are transported across the subaerially exposed shelf by fluvial systems and deposited as deep-marine sediments (Posamentier and Vail, 1988). Deep-marine deposition significantly increases after delta progradation to the shelf edge. Many modern deltas are known to have prograded throughout much of the Holocene marine transgression and resultant highstand. This indicates that the formation of shelf-edge deltas and consequent deep-marine deposition are not limited to times of relative sea-level lowstand and early transgression. According to Burgess and Hovius (1998), transport of considerable sediment volumes, including significant volumes of sand into the deep marine realm via shelf-edge deltas, is common during highstand times and may be enhanced by subsequent submarine canyon development. Highstand coast lines commonly are characterized by prograding deltas deposited during a period of decelerating relative sea-level rise. Times of sea-level lowstand have been associated with periods of high sedimentation rates. During early lowstand, because of sea-level fall, shorelines tend to prograde rapidly across the shelf, forcing depocenters to reach the shelf edge. This results in accumulation of large volumes of sand and mud at the shelf edge. Rapid sedimentation on the shelf edge and upper slope gives rise to frequent slumping, which can generate sediment gravity flows into the deep basin. Deepwater sedimentation is likely to be most rapid during periods of sea-level lowstand because depocenters are most likely to be located at or near the shelf edge. However, deepwater sedimentation also occurs during highstands of sea level. Canyons that extend across the shelf and capture fluvial flow are active feeders as deepwater systems form during relative sea-level highstands (as in case of Congo River). The facies and log expression of deepwater sandstone deposits are highly variable. In deposits resulting from confined flows in turbidite-levee complexes, a blocky to fining upward log pattern can be observed within the channels, whereas serrated log patterns and thin sand-shale alterations are more common in the levees and overbank deposits (Figure 4). In deepwater turbidite systems that were deposited by essentially unconfined flow (i.e., flow not confined by levees), tabular-bedded deposits commonly result.
Several dip-oriented seismic profiles (Figure 5) are selected to link the shelf-edge delta systems of Krishna and Godavari deltas to the deepwater depositional systems. Interpretation processes involve identification and sampling of relevant seismic lines showing depositional features of different geological age, identification and marking of reflection geometries and patterns, establishing major bounding surfaces, identification and marking of major bounding surfaces on deepwater depositional features, and developing a sequence stratigraphic framework for shelf to deepwater depositional processes.
The seismic line is chosen in a way that reflects the slope from shelf to deepwater and is oriented NW-SE. Since the seismic reflectivity data was non-optimal in continuity, the phase section has been used to identify seismic reflection geometries, truncation patterns, and hierarchy of major bounding surfaces in a seismic sequence stratigraphic framework. The interpretation (Figure-6) aims to bring out spatial and temporal relationship between highstand delta system, shelf-edge delta system, and slope/basin-floor fan systems. The
stratal pattern showing erosional cut defined by a truncation boundary
at the base and onlapping fill is indicative of incised valley. In
correlation, the base of incised valley was carried along the
truncations to define the sequence boundary. Down the slope, bimodal
downlaps are noticed on marked sequence boundary and interpreted to be
basin-floor fan. Identification of the above-mentioned features is
indicative of rapid relative sea-level fall, marking the beginning of an
early lowstand system during which the shelf was subaerially exposed and
cut through by incised valleys to discharge sediments into the basin
floor. This process highlights the genetic link between basin-floor
deposition and highstand shelfal facies, which are actually the
substrate for incision. If sediment supply is low, then basin-floor
The downlap reflection terminations onto basin
floor fan and onlap to the sequence boundary are indicative of a
lowstand wedge Tracing the last downlap event on basin floor fan updip to the shelf will mark the maximum flooding surface (MFS). Sandwiched between the first transgression at the shelf edge and maximum flooding surface is the transgressive system tract (TST) indicated by backstepping – the termination of events. Incised valleys tend to be filled during early transgressive time and to be overlain by finer clastics during late transgressive time. The highstand delta system represents the time when the rate of relative sea-level rise slowed down and with increased sediment supply shoreline started to regress, as indicated by prograding clinoforms downlapping on the maximum flooding surface. Interpretation of a highstand delta, in general, is difficult and tentative, owing to cannibalization by the next lowstand depositional cycle. This framework can further be used to analyse the facies distribution within the sequence.
This 3D seismic section is through a deepwater
well drilled in the Godavari basin. The gamma-ray log is superimposed on
seismic section to indicate lithology, as deflections to the right
indicate higher gamma-ray count and therefore more shaly units. LSF is
indicated by blocky low-gamma ray sections. The bottom part of this unit
is a basin-floor fan deposit, whereas the upper part is a channel-levee
This dip-oriented seismic line is located north of the Krishna Delta connecting the shelf to the upper and lower slope. Interpretation is made only for Late Miocene-Pliocene sequence. Vertical aggradation is more common during shelf-edge migration from PS1 to PS5, and progradation becomes dominant during shelf-edge migration from PS5 to PS6. The seismic line is along the sinuous channel between surface H1 and H2 (embedded in Figure 8). The slope channels are identified between H1 and H2. In three dimensions, it takes a sinuous channel shape. The surface H1 can be interpreted as a sequence boundary with onlap (marked by green arrow) and the channel features evolving from the shelfal area. The surface H2 cannot be extended into the slope area with confidence, and the package of sediment from H2 to H3 can be thought of as downlap onto H2, probably in an increasing shelfal accommodation setting. Unit F shows a bidirectional downlap onto H3, and also there is evidence of onlap onto H3, indicating sequence-boundary conditions. The emphasis is the linkage of the shelf between H1 and H2 with the slope channels downdip. This may be delta building on the shelf, giving rise to slope sedimentation in the form of deepwater sinuous channels.
This
seismic line is located near to mouth of the present-day Krishna River.
Seismic section shows the shelf-edge delta system and lowstand fan
The seismic line is located in the KG onland basin, near to the Krishna River. The line shows the shelf-edge-deltaic, prograding clinoforms of Cretaceous-Paleocene age. The downstepping clinoforms indicate subaerial erosion and sediment bypass to the slope/basin floor. The bright amplitude of foresets at the shelf edge indicates the presence of coarser clastics at the mouth of the delta.
This seismic section is from the Krishna delta
and shows a lowstand shelf-edge delta system. The younger canyon system
cannibalized the shelf and subsequently dumped these sediments on the
basin floor as a basin-floor fan
This seismic section shows the features from
shelf to deepwater. Typical reflection geometries defined either by
bimodal downlap on a sequence boundary or downlap downdip and onlap
updip reflection geometries are indicative of lowstand fan Key to identify the shelf-edge delta system was to identify prograding and downstepping reflection characteristics at the shelf edge.
Conclusion
Sequence stratigraphic approach provides a
model to understand the sedimentological processes by interpreting the
seismic stratal geometry and their facies assemblages. This approach
helps in linking the depositional elements on a regional scale, ranging
from fluvial to deepwater. During a lowstand period, the accommodation
space in shelf environments decreases, facilitating the basinward
migration of the fluvial delta. This process loads the shelf edge,
forming shelf-edge delta. The collapse of a shelf edge due to slumping
or direct fluvial discharge to deep basin, because of hyperpycnal flow,
carries the sediments into the deep basin, forming the lowstand deposits
in the form of basin-floor fan, slope fan (channel-levee
Burgess, P.M., and Hovius, N., 1998, Rates of delta progradation during highstands: consequences for timing of deposition in deepmarine systems: Journal of the Geological Society, London, v. 155, 1998, p. 217-222. Posamentier, H.W., and Allen, G.P., 1993a, Variability of the sequence stratigraphic model: effects of local basin factors: Sedimentary Geology, v. 86, p. 91-109. Posamentier, H.W., and Vail, P.R., 1988, Eustatic controls on clastic deposition II—sequence and systems tract models, in Wilgus, C.K., et al., eds. Sea level changes: An integrated approach: SEPM Special Publication no. 42, p. 125–154. Rao, G.N, 2001, Sedimentation, stratigraphy, and petroleum potential of Krishna-Godavari basin, East Coast of India: AAPG Bulletin, v.85, no.9, p. 1623-1643.
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