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The Petroleum
Potential of South
Africa's
Onshore Karoo Basins*
Lindiwe Raseroka1 and Ian R. McLachlan1
Search and Discovery Article #10196 (2009)
Posted June 5, 2009
*Adapted from expanded abstract prepared for AAPG
International Conference and
Exhibition, Cape Town, South
Africa
, October 26-29, 2008.
1Frontier Geology, Petroleum
Agency SA, Cape Town, South
Africa
([email protected]
)
The Late Carboniferous to Mid-Jurassic Karoo basins hold an
important place in South African geology and economics as they occupy more than
half of the nation's land area and host the coal deposits that provide most of
the country's energy. Together with the gold in the underlying Archean
Witwatersrand deposits they have provided the focus for the development of South
Africa's
industrial heartland. As yet very little systematic modern exploration for
petroleum has been done - the opportunity exists for a new generation of
explorers to test the potential of these huge basins.
The Great Karoo basin covers an area of over 700,000 km2 and constitutes a retro-arc foreland basin. (Figure 1)
Maximum down-warping occurred in the south where cumulative sediment thickness
reached 12 km. South
Africa's
main coal deposits occur in an arc across the
northern flank of the basin but major reserves are also contained in the
smaller fault controlled basins that lie to the north.
Promising petroleum exploration plays include:
- Coal-bed methane
- Conventional gas
- Unconventional, possibly biogenic gas (associated with high concentrations of helium - up to 26%) that occurs in the Witwatersrand Group and other ancient basement rocks in the Welkom and Evander gold field areas.
- Deep tight shale gas
- Conventional oil
The present energy shortfall in South
Africa
provides a new
impetus for the development of an expanded natural gas industry.
