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Sequence Stratigraphy in a
Rift Basin: An
Example
from the Middle Jurassic Hugin Formation, Southern Viking
Graben
, North Sea*
By
Atle Folkestad1 and Nicholas Satur1
Search and Discovery Article #40309 (2008)
Posted July 7, 2008
*Adapted from oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, TX, April 20-23, 2008
1StatoilHydro, Bergen, Norway ([email protected])
The Jurassic
Hugin Formation consists of shallow marine sandstones that belong to a
significant hydrocarbon reservoir in the Sleipner Area in the North Sea. The
formation encompasses coarsening-upward units of mouthbar and shoreface facies,
interpreted as deposits during regression, and fining-upward units with tidal
channel, dune, and tidal flat facies interpreted as an estuary environment
during transgression. The correlations reveal that the studied part of the Hugin
Formation consists of 8 sequences, each with a transgressive and a regressive
unit, representing the transgressive systems tract and the highstand systems
tract, respectively. The sequences are stacked landward, as a result of rapid
tectonic subsidence due to rifting of the Viking
Graben
that led to an
elongated-shaped
graben
where tidal currents were amplified and wave-action
damped. Lowstand and forced regressive systems tracts are not identified, as
relative sea-level falls are suppressed in a rapidly subsiding basin as the
basin subsidence rate outpaces any fall in eustatic sea level. Thus sequence
stratigraphic architecture for subsiding basins can be very different than those
sequence stratigraphic models proposed for passive margins. Through facies
interpretation and sequence stratigraphic correlations between wells, these
regressive and transgressive units show thickness trends in the form of
sigmoidal shaped wedges stacked in an offset manner in a dip direction. These
thickness trends illustrate sediment partitioning within the sequences and are
explained by the relationship between accommodation spaces versus the sediment
supply. During regression the focus of sedimentation is pushed basinward, and
during transgression it is pushed landward as sediments are trapped there. The
mapping of these sequence stratigraphic units serves as input to reservoir
drainage management and to identify new exploration targets.
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The
Hugin Formation consists of a fining-upward estuary environment deposited
during transgression (TST), and a coarsening-upward prograding delta with
associated shoreface environment deposited during regression (HST). The
Hugin Formation has an aggradational to retrogradational stacking pattern
caused by the opening and drowning of the Viking Husmo, T., G.P. Hamar, O. Hoiland, E.P. Johannessen, A. Romuld, A.M. Spencer, and R. Titterton, 2003, Lower and Middle Jurassic, in D. Evans, C. Graham, A. Armour, and P. Bathurst, eds., The millenium atlas: Petroleum geology of the central and northern North Sea: Geological Society (London), p.
129-156.
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