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Neogene Evolution of a Confined Upper Slope Canyon System with Emphasis on Canyon Fill Architecture, Offshore Equatorial Guinea*
By
Zane Jobe1and Jim Hewlett2
Search and Discovery Article #50048 (2007)
Posted August 8, 2007
*Adapted from oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, with SEPM, Long Beach, California, April 1-4, 2007.
1Stanford University, Stanford, CA ([email protected])
2Hess Corporation, Houston, TX
Abstract
The slope canyon systems of the
Rio Muni Basin, offshore Equatorial Guinea have persisted for more than 80
million years and contain world class hydrocarbon reservoirs. An excellent 3D
seismic reflection survey along with borehole, palynologic, and wireline log
data beautifully illustrate the aggrading upper slope canyon system ~ 25 km
offshore. The slope canyons maintain themselves through syn-depositional
faulting
and display low sinuosities. During the Neogene, the slope canyons
aggraded more than 600 m, while migrating laterally less than 500 m.
Slope canyon fill is characterized by three main depositional elements: 1) thalweg elements that stack upon each other as the canyon aggrades vertically; 2) lateral accretion packages/elements that occur on the inner bends of the low sinuosity canyons; and 3) shingled reflection packages that stack in a down-canyon fashion, usually found just down slope of a knick point.
These three elements are
modified by syn-depositional
faulting
, both small down canyon slumps and large,
canyon margin bounding faults that exaggerate the canyon topography and cause
the canyons to aggrade rather than migrate. This
faulting
gives rise to very
complex geometries in a dip sense that seem quite simple in a strike sense. The
faulting
could complicate reservoir connectivity and continuity in similar upper
slope canyon systems globally.
Regional Background
(selected figures)
|
Regional background: location map of offshore Equatorial Guinea. |
|
|
NE-SW schematic geoseismic section, with key reflectors and faults. |
(selected Figures)
|
Canyon-parallel |
|
|
E-W seismic line, illustrating
down-canyon listric |
|
|
N-S seismic line, illustrating
down-canyon listric |
|
|
NE-SW seismic line illustrate that
canyons maintain themselves through |
Canyon Configuration and Fill Architecture
(selected figures)
Canyon-fill architecture
• Lateral accretion packages (LAP)
• Thalweg
• Shingled canyon fill
Conclusions
• Main canyon aggraded through of Tertiary
– But rendered inactive in mid Pliocene
• Slate (8.2 Ma)
– initiated modern canyons responsible for piracy
• Complex canyon fill and compartmentalization
• Position on slope
• Canyon knick point migration and piracy
• Pock marks
