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PSRegional Structural Framework of Gabon, Derived from
Public Source
Gravity
Data*
Michael Alexander1 and Karim Aimadeddine1
Search and Discovery Article #10199 (2009)
Posted August 6, 2009
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Cape Town, South Africa, October 26-29, 2008
1Integrated Geophysical Corporation, Houston, TX ([email protected] )
This
regional interpretation of western Gabon is based on satellite-derived
gravity
data offshore, a bathymetry/topographic grid, and a compilation of published
data offshore and onshore. Local features of primary
exploration
interest
include a series of basins and high blocks trending subparallel to and
subnormal to the coastline. Fault/fracture zones extend northeast from oceanic
crust of the South Atlantic onto the offshore shelf and the onshore coastal
areas of Gabon.
Gabon’s coastal plain is flanked to the east by basement outcrop from the Gabon-Congo border to the Gabon-Equatorial Guinea border. It widens northward and is subdivided north-south into two main structural provinces by the N’Komi fault/fracture zone. It contains five basins, two of which extend into the offshore, and five high blocks, one of which extends into the offshore. Gabon’s offshore shelf contains five significant basins and five major high blocks.
An
interpreted oceanic-continental crust boundary lies offshore, trending
northwest parallel the shoreline and along an alignment of residual
gravity
maxima. It is locally offset by northeast-southwest shears, has a major dextral
offset at the N’Komi, and then trends north along another alignment of residual
maxima as far as the Gabon-Equatorial Guinea border.
The
Atlantic Hinge Zone, or shelf-slope break, south of N’Komi Fault Zone can be
correlated with the seaward edge of a northwest-southeast residual
gravity
maximum
trend. Similar
gravity
anomalies suggest that a hinge zone continues north of
the N’Komi before either turning northeast between Loiret and Fang Fault Zone
or trending north to the Equatorial Guinea border. While interpretation of
satellite-derived
gravity
can provide a regional geologic framework,
integration with other data sets is necessary to produce a map with more
immediate
exploration
value.
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This regional interpretation of western Gabon is based on our interpretation of satellite-derived gravity data offshore, digital topography onshore, and a
compilation of published data both offshore and onshore. Two maps are shown
for comparison and correlation: Figure 1
displays the regional geologic features over-posted on an isostatic residual
gravity map. Important features include a series of basins and high blocks
trending subparallel to and subnormal to the coastline. Numerous
fault/fracture zones are seen to extend northeast from oceanic crust areas of
the South Atlantic onto the offshore shelf and the onshore coastal areas of
Gabon. One major fault/fracture zone, the N’Komi, divides coastal Gabon into
two main structural provinces: the south and the north.
The coastal plain widens northward from the Gabon-Congo border to the Gabon-Equatorial Guinea border and is bounded to the east by basement outcrop. It contains five named basins, two of which extend into the offshore. The coastal plain is also the site of five named high blocks, one of which extends into the offshore.
Gabon’s offshore shelf
contains five significant basins and five major high blocks. Those closest to
the coastline are poorly defined by satellite-derived
Figure 2
shows the horizontal gradient of free-air
Geophysical and Geological Data
Primary input data for the
interpretation consisted of public source (Sandwell version 16.1)
satellite-derived free air
Several published papers
map and describe a variety of geologic features from onshore basement outcrop
to offshore oceanic crust. However, the existence, location and trend of some
features are inconsistent from paper to paper, and not always consistent with
data from the relatively new and complete satellite-derived
Two researched papers include seismic data straddling the N’Komi Fault Zone. They provide depths from three seismic refraction profiles and sections from a deep seismic project and thereby contributed to our regional interpretation.
The interpretation area lies southeast of the Cameroon Volcanic Zone and west of the interior Congo Craton. Coastal Gabon can be divided into two main structural provinces, south and north, separated by a major wrench or transfer system, the N’Komi Fault Zone. Several published studies propose that both provinces are dominated by rift tectonics, with rifting progressively younger from south to north. Our regional geologic features interpretation includes features common to both provinces, as well as local structures found in each.
Oceanic-Continental Crust Boundary The crust boundary is
interpreted as lying offshore, trending northwest parallel the shoreline and
along an alignment of residual
Atlantic Hinge ZoneThe Atlantic Hinge Zone, or
shelf-slope break, south of N’Komi Fault Zone can be mapped along the seaward
edge of a northwest-southeast residual
Basement Outcrop and SubcropBasement outcrops on the eastern edge of the coastal plain from the Gabon-Congo border to the Gabon-Equatorial Guinea border. The outcrop areas include major provinces such as the Congo Precambrian Craton, Nyanga Precambrian Basin, Franceville Precambrian Basin, Mayumba Range Fold Belt, and Eburnean Fold Belt. Although the province boundaries generally conform to features in the digital topography, further study might show that a closer fit is possible.
Our depth to basement
contours increase seaward from 1 km (subsea) near outcrop to 8 km in both the
northern and southern provinces. Much of the contouring is based on published
maps, with subsequent local modifications where dictated by
South GabonThe regional geologic interpretation highlights 13 major structures and features in South Gabon. They are the South Subbasin, Kaba High and M’Bya Terrace, Banio Graben, Lucina Uplift, Mayumba Spur, Vera Graben, Gamba-Bigorneau High, Sette Cama High, Dentale Trough, South Gabon Basin, Rembo Kotto-Ilongo High, and N’Komi Fault Zone.
North GabonThe regional geologic interpretation highlights 14 major structures and features in the northern Gabon area. They include the Dianongo Trough, North Basin, Atlantic Basin, Lambarene Horst, Interior Basin, GLB Fault, Kobe Fault, Ekouata Fault, Loiret Plug, Gombe Plug, North Subbasin, Fang Fault Zone, Ascension Fault Zone, and Port Gentil Fault Zone. The locations of four apparent, but unnamed, igneous plugs are shown as questioned.
Conclusions
An important conclusion is that appropriately compiled, processed and interpreted public source data can be used to provide an early-stage and cost-effective aid to regional geologic understanding of a large area. Details can be verified, added, or reinterpreted as data from new and more intensive geologic/geophysical programs become available.
A second conclusion based
on our interpretation is that in the offshore and coastal provinces of Gabon,
as in many basinal areas, basement deformation has strongly influenced basin
sedimentary structure and stratigraphy. Major geologic features, such as
fault zones, structural highs, and depocenters - critical to forming a
favorable environment for oil and gas accumulation - are seen as
basement-related and are present both onshore and offshore Gabon. Our interpretation
of the isostatic
Bessoles, B., 1977, Geologie de l’Afrique—le craton ouest Africaine, BRGM Memoir No. 88, 402 p.
Rabinowitz, P.D., 1982,
Simpson, R.W., et al, 1983, AIRYROOT: a FORTRAN program for calculating the gravitational attraction of an Airy isostatic root out to 166.7 km: USGS Open-file Report 83-883, 66 p.
Teisserenc, P. and J. Villemin, 1989, Sedimentary basin of Gabon—geology and oil systems: AAPG Memoir 48, p. 117-199.
Vidal, J., et al, 1975,
L’
Wannesson, J., et al, 1991, Structure and evolution of adjoining segments of the west African margin determined from deep seismic profiling, in Continental Lithosphere: Deep Seismic Reflections: AGU Geodynamics Series, v. 22, p. 275-289.
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