Click to view article in PDF format.
Click to view presentation in PDF format.
Hydrocarbon Prospectivity in Mesozoic and Early Cenozoic Rift Basins in Central/Northern Kenya*
Jean-Jacques Tiercelin1, Peter Thuo2, Thierry Nalpas1, and Jean-Luc Potdevin3
Search and Discovery Article #10188 (2009)
Posted April 23, 2009
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for, and from oral presentation at, AAPG International Conference and Exhibition,Cape Town, South Africa, October 26-29, 2008.
1 UMR 6118 CNRS Géosciences Rennes, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France (a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected])
2 National Oil Corporation of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya
3 UMR 8157 CNRS Géosystèmes, Université Lille 1, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France
Because they offer the oldest and longest-lived sedimentary basins of the Cenozoic East African Rift System (EARS) and because they are a crossover area between rifts of Cretaceous and Cenozoic age, the Northern and Central Kenya rifts, (NKR) and (CKR), respectively, or NCKR collectively, are among the most important areas for hydrocarbon prospecting in the EARS (Figure 1).
The NKR, or Turkana Depression, consists of strings of N-S oriented half-grabens, the oldest known basins being of Paleogene-middle Miocene age. Crossing at the north end of the NKR are the NW-oriented Anza-Sudanese rifts that both are Cretaceous to Paleogene. The CKR shows two N-S half-grabens, the Baringo Basin (Paleogene-Present) and the Kerio Basin (Paleogene-upper Miocene). All basins are filled by up to 8-km thick sediments/volcanics of Cretaceous-Neogene age.
New studies have focused on reservoir/source rock quality and structural link between reservoir/source rock/seal. Both questions relate to the sequence of deformation events between the Anza-Sudanese (Cretaceous-Paleogene deformation) and Kenya (Neogene-Recent) rifts. Geophysical/field geology results confirm continuity in terms of deformation events between the Anza-Sudanese and NK rifts. In terms of hydrocarbon prospect, arkosic sandstones in CKR/NKR (or NCKR) demonstrate a good reservoir quality, with porosity up to 25 %. Strong changes in terms of diagenetic alteration relate to deformation events (burial/uplift) or change in sediment source. High quality source rocks relate to freshwater lake environments under tropical climate. Such environments have been identified during Paleogene in the NKR and lower Neogene in the CKR and are suspected in basins of the same age that have not yet been prospected. Relations between reservoir/source
rock/seal are connected to Neogene deformation and have been investigated by
magnetotelluric
methods and high-resolution seismic stratigraphy.
|
|
In this article, we review the evidence of oil potential in a suite of Cretaceous (?) to middle Miocene-aged basins, in terms of source rock and reservoir properties. This study provides a necessary basic set of Major exploration efforts have been carried out since the 1970s in the NKR following an extensive seismic survey offshore Lake Turkana by Project PROBE (Dunkleman et al., 1989). Three strings of deeply buried, N-S oriented half-graben basins have been identified by the Amoco Kenya Petroleum Company (AKPC) to the west of Lake Turkana. These basins are among the oldest known in the East African Rift System, being of Cretaceous to Paleogene-middle Miocene age. Basins to the immediate west of Lake Turkana are Lokichar and North Kerio (to the immediate east of the former); up to 7 km of fill have been identified by reflection seismic and tested by two exploration wells (the Loperot-1 and Eliye Springs-1 wells, drilled by Shell Exploration and Production Kenya B.V.) (Morley et al., 1999b) (Figure 1).
To the west-northwest of Lake Turkana, gravity and reflection seismic Reservoir/Source Rock Features of the Basins
All these basins in the Central and Northern Kenya rifts are filled by 5- to 8-km thick Cretaceous (?)-Neogene sediments and volcanics of Paleogene-Neogene age. Sediments of Paleogene-Neogene age crop out widely west of Lake Turkana, while Cretaceous sediments are only known from subsurface Reservoir/source rock quality has been studied within several basins and specific sedimentary formations in the NK and CK rifts—from north to south:
Lotikipi and Gatome Basins and Lapur Sandstone Formation
The Lotikipi and Gatome basins have been shown from gravity and seismic To the east of the Gatome basin, a thick pile of siltstones, sandstones, minor conglomerates, and mudstones crop out along the main border fault escarpment (Lapur Range) that bounds the Lake Turkana rift basin to the west (Figures 1 and 2). The Lapur Sandstone Formation shows a maximum thickness of ~500 m at the Lokitaung Gorge type section (Thuo, Ph.D. thesis). The LSF unconformably overlies the Precambrian basement. The lower units contain poorly preserved dinosaur bones, dated Cenomanian (Arambourg and Wolff, 1969). Its uppermost section appears interbedded within the first lava flows of the Turkana Formation, dated late Eocene. Potential source rock occurrence is a major question within the Lapur Sandstone Formation. Lenses of dark grey or black silty mudstones, few metres thick, are locally present in the LSF, and they may represent floodplain or shallow lake deposits. Nevertheless, these deposits do not demonstrate a high organic content. Considering its stratigraphic position between the base of the basalts of the Turkana Formation and the Precambrian basement, the Lapur Sandstone Formation is tentatively correlated to the sedimentary units identified in a similar stratigraphic position on the TVK-4 and –7 seismic lines within the Lotikipi and Gatome basins. However, major changes in thickness along a S-N trend identified for the LSF may suggest the presence in the Gatome and Lotikipi basins of other (older or younger) sedimentary packages in a similar stratigraphic position. The Lapur Sandstone Formation has an original detrital composition made predominantly of polycrystalline quartz grains and K-feldspars sourced from metamorphic basement. This formation may offer an interesting reservoir potential that is mainly controlled by the different types of cementation, largely calcite in the lowest 150 m of the formation, hematite in the middle 100 m, and kaolin with subordinate hematite in the top zone of the formation (Thuo, Ph.D. thesis). The initial depositional porosity of the LSF may have been as high as 41%, which has since been reduced to values ranging from 3 to 25 %. Overall, the top half of the LSF constitutes a more prospective reservoir zone than the lower half.
Located to the south-southwest of the N-S- trending part of Lake Turkana, the Lokichar Basin is a N-S-trending, east-facing half-graben, 60 km long and 30 km wide and floored by Precambrian crystalline basement. This basin is bounded to the west by a prominent east-dipping listric fault, the Lokichar Fault, with no present-day topographic expression. As shown by reflection seismic Possible equivalents of the lower parts of the Lokhone Formation crop out to the east of the Lokichar Basin, at Lariu, and on the eastern side of Lake Turkana, at Mount Porr (Tiercelin et al., 2004) (Figure 1). The Mount Porr sandstones are composed mainly of quartz and feldspars, indicating a regional metamorphic source. Diagenetic events are recorded by calcite, quartz, or kaolin cements. A high porosity (up to 33 %) was nevertheless preserved, probably associated with late diagenetic dolomitization. The upper shale interval in the Loperot-1 well is dated late Oligocene-early Miocene, while the lower shale interval is of possible Eocene to early Oligocene age (Morley et al., 1999b). Organic matter studies demonstrate a good source rock potential with high TOC values (up to 17 %) and prove an algal lacustrine origin for this organic matter (Talbot et al., 2004). Pollen analyses conducted on the upper shale interval from the Loperot-1 well demonstrate the presence in the Lokichar region of a mosaic environment of semi-deciduous forest and humid woodland presenting strong affinities with vegetation occurring today in the Guinea-Congolia/Zambezia phytogeographical zone (Vincens et al., 2006). Rainfall more than 1000 mm/year characterized the Lokichar region during late Oligocene-Early Miocene. The Lokichar Lake was interpreted as similar to some of the modern large lakes of the western branch of the EARS, such as Lake Albert or Lake Edward. Kerio and Baringo Basins and Tambach and Ngorora Formations
The Kerio and Baringo basins are located in the central segment of the Kenya Rift between 0° 15’ and 0° 45’ N. The present-day Kerio Basin is occupied by the Kerio River valley and is considered today as tectonically inactive, while the Baringo Basin is occupied by the Baringo and Bogoria lakes and is tectonically active. Gravity and seismic investigations conducted by the National Oil Corporation of Kenya in the Kerio Valley in 1989 and a Thick sedimentary deposits are found interbedded between these volcanic units and relate to the existence of two large lakes known as the Tambach and Ngorora lakes, both dated middle Miocene. Sediments crop out along the western faulted margins of the Kerio (the Elgeyo fault escarpment) and Baringo (the Saimo fault escarpment) basins (Figure 4). They represent a succession of lake environments from shallow, freshwater lakes resembling the present-day Lake Baringo to small saline, alkaline lakes such as Lake Bogoria, that evolve as a consequence to combined tectonic, volcanic and climatic events to a large freshwater lake. Potential source rocks are represented in the Ngorora Formation by the Poi shales that contain up to 20 % TOC. These shales are similar to the Oligo-Miocene shales found in the Lokichar Basin, or to the organic-rich muds found in the modern Lake Tanganyika Basin. Although these basins have not attracted much interest from oil exploration companies in the past, recent oil discoveries in the Albertine Graben in Uganda has shifted the focus of many oil companies to such rift basins. With the increased oil exploration activity within Kenya rift basins, it will only be a matter of time before deep exploration wells are drilled in these basins, providing a better understanding of the evolution of basin architecture and sedimentary fill. Arambourg, C., and Wolf, R.G., 1969, Nouvelles données paléontologiques sur l’âge des grès du Lubur (Turkana Grits) à l’Ouest du lac Rodolphe: Comptes Rendus Société géologique de France, v. 6, p. 190-202. Desprès, A., 2008, Evolution tectono-sédimentaire des bassins de rift Crétacé-Paléogène du Nord du Kenya: Master 2, Université de Rennes 1, France.
Dunkleman, T.J., Rosendahl, B.R., and Karson, J.A., 1989, Structure and stratigraphy of the Turkana Rift from seismic reflection
Hautot, S., Tarits, P., Whaler, K., Le Gall, B., Tiercelin, J.-J., and Le Turdu, C., 2000, Deep structure of the Baringo Rift Basin (Central Kenya) from three-dimensional Morley, C.K., Wescott, W.A., Stone, D.M., Harper, R.M., Wigger, S.T., and Karanja, F.M., 1992, Tectonic evolution of the northern Kenya Rift: Journal of the Geological Society of London, v. 149, p. 333-348. Morley, C.K., and Ngenoh, D.K., and Ego, J.K. (part 2), 1999a, Introduction to the East African Rift System, in C.K. Morley, ed., Geoscience of rift systems-evolution of East Africa: AAPG Studies in Geology, v. 44, p. 1-18. Morley, C.K., Karanja, F.M., Wescott, W.A., Stone, D.M., Harper, R.M., Wigger, S.T., and Day, R.A. 1999b, Geology and Geophysics of the Western Turkana Basins, Kenya, in C.K. Morley, ed., Geoscience of rift systems-evolution of East Africa: AAPG Studies in Geology, v. 44, p. 19-54. F. Mugisha, Ebinger, C.J. Strecker, M., and Pope, D., 1997, Two-stage rifting in the Kenya rift: implications for half-graben models: Tectonophysics, v. 278 (1-4), p. 63-81. Pickford, M.H.L., 1978, Geology, palaeoenvironments and vertebrate faunas of the mid-Miocene Ngorora Formation, Kenya: Geological Society, London, Special Publications, v. 6, p. 237-262. Talbot, M.R., Morley, C.K., Tiercelin, J.-J., Le Hérissé, A., Potdevin, J.L., and Le Gall, B., 2004, Hydrocarbon Potential of the Meso-Cenozoic Turkana Depression, northern Kenya. II-Source Rocks: quality, maturation, depositional environments and structural control: Marine and Petroleum Geology, v. 21, p. 63-78. Tiercelin, J.J., Potdevin, J.L., Morley, C.K., Talbot, M.R., Bellon, H., Rio, A., Le Gall, B., and Vétel, W., 2004, Hydrocarbon potential of the Meso-Cenozoic Turkana Depression, northern Kenya. I. Reservoirs: depositional environments, diagenetic characteristics, and source rock- reservoir relationships: Marine and Petroleum Geology, v. 21, p. 41-62. Vincens, A., Tiercelin, J.-J., and Buchet, G., 2006, New Oligocene-early Miocene microflora from the southwestern Turkana Basin. Palaeoenvironmental implications in the northern Kenya Rift: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, v. 239, p. 470-486. Wescott, W.A., Wigger, S.T., Stone, D.M., and Morley, C.K. 1999, Geology and Geophysics of the Lotikipi Plain, in C.K. Morley, ed., Geoscience of Rift Systems-Evolution of East Africa: AAPG Studies in Geology, 44, p. 55-65.
|
