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CONTISLOPE—Evolution of Submarine Channel Systems on Continental Slopes*
By
Tiago M. Alves1, Joe Cartwright1, and Richard Davies2
Search and Discovery Article #40263 (2007)
Posted October 25, 2007
*Reprinted, with some modification in format, from AAPG European Region Newsletter, September 2007, v.2 (http://www.aapg.org/europe/newsletters/index.cfm), p. 9-10, with kind permission of the authors and AAPG European Region Newsletter, Hugo Matias, Editor ([email protected]).
13D Lab. School of Earth, Ocean and Planetary Sciences, Cardiff, University, United Kingdom ([email protected])
2CeREES, Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, United Kingdom
The investigation of geological processes on
continental margins is of major interest as sediments deposited in these areas
can provide a high-resolution record of past climatic changes, at the same time
hosting some of the world’s major hydrocarbon reservoirs. Continental margins
are affected by, and hence provide a detail record of, global changes in
relative sea-level,
large-scale
variations in oceanographic conditions and regional tectonic events. These time-dependent
changes are commonly recorded on the form of major variations in slope
morphology, spatial distribution of depositional systems, and overall
architecture of continental margins, particularly in deep-offshore sedimentary
basins where the combined effect of eustasy and regional tectonics is
distinctively marked. Some of the latter processes are known to control sea-floor
fluid seepage and the subsurface
preservation
of hydrocarbons. Thus, areas such
as the Gulf of Cadiz, Brazilian margin, and Rockall trough show the effect of
slope-moulding
processes in subsurface fluid seepage systems, with these latter being clearly
dependent on the past 4D (time vs. space) evolution of geostrophic currents and
associated depositional systems. In addition, main periods of slope
destabilisation and landsliding on continental margins can frequently be
correlated with abrupt changes in base (sea) level associated with climatic or
tectonic events (e.g., Mediterranean Sea).
To investigate and to quantify the ways depositional
systems relate to the underlying structure and sea-floor
geometry of continental margins are therefore crucial for the analysis and
prediction of geohazards, subsurface
preservation
of hydrocarbon plays, and to
assess the relative budget of fluid (including CO2 and methane)
expelled by continental margins into the hydrosphere. Moreover, geological
studies of continental slopes are becoming increasingly important as hydrocarbon
exploration is gradually, but coherently, shifting towards deep-water
prospects. This is presently the case of hydrocarbon-prone
areas offshore Norway, Gulf of Mexico and on the South Atlantic Margin, where
most studies relate to the imperative need of evaluating the content and
geometry of potential hydrocarbon fields, together with assessments of
continental slope stability, in most cases within areas of significant sea-floor
fluid seepage.
The CONTISLOPE project utilises a comprehensive set of 3D seismic from offshore Brazil (Espírito Santo Basin) in the investigation of 4D (spatial vs. time) changes in morphology and sedimentary facies distribution within the Rio Doce submarine canyon system. Major seismic and sedimentary facies changes are thought to be related to: a) regional salt tectonics, and; b) major eustatic variations occurring in the Cenozoic; c) regional-scale changes in palaeoceanographic conditions. Particular attention will be given to the lateral migration of stacked channel systems during the main stages of salt-diapir growth. Available 3D data sets will be complemented by existing Deep Sea Drilling Program (DSDP), Ocean Drilling Program (ODP), and Industry subsurface data.
Main hypothesis for the complex lateral and vertical stacking of submarine channels are: a) changes in accommodation space within evolving salt withdrawal basins; b) variations in the nature (and relative grain-size) of material being fed to developing submarine channels; c) changes in source-to-sink distances derived from eustatic and tectonic events. The project will try and address some of these questions, by assessing the importance of each of the latter effects on the Eocene-Miocene evolution of the Rio Doce Canyon System (Figure 1).
The
secondary aim of the project relates to the interpretation of the main factors
influencing the migration, escape, and
preservation
of hydrocarbons in such
structures. Growing salt structures significantly fracture the overburden rocks
generating post-depositional
flow paths for any fluids accumulated in porous strata. In addition, fluid
movement is promoted in adjacent salt-withdrawal
basins as a result of variations in geometry and head-gradient within reservoir
rocks. With salt comprising a natural barrier to fluids, it becomes crucial to
understand how the stratigraphy and structure vary in relation to salt
structures, so that hydrocarbon exploration can lead to significant discoveries.
