Geology and
Hydrocarbon
Potential
of the Makran Thrust Belt, Southwestern Pakistan
By
James C. Pol1, Dana M. Jurick1, Oscar E. Gilbert1, David A. Nollsch1, Shaji Alam2, John D. Smewing3
(1) Ocean Energy Inc, Houston, TX (2) Ocean Pakistan, Ltd, Islamabad, Pakistan (3) Earth Resources, Ltd, Swansea, United Kingdom
New 3D seismic data, geological mapping, shallow coring, and quantitative
structural reconstructions allow improved understanding of the Makran
hydrocarbon
system. Thick turbidite sands, clearly-defined structural traps, and
evidence of an active
hydrocarbon
system encourage further exploration.
The 500-meter thick sands of the Miocene Panjgur Formation were deposited on
oceanic crust as part of the proto-Indus Fan, and later buried by prograding
slope mudstones of the Parkini Formation. These sediments were scraped off the
Indian Plate to form the present Makran thrust belt. Syntectonic sedimentation
of the Parkini is indicated by angular unconformities visible in outcrop, and
downlap sequences apparent from seismic data. Prograding Pliocene through
Holocene slope to paralic sediments buried the thrust ridges and provide a
vertical
hydrocarbon
seal. Balanced reconstructions suggest approximately 40-50
percent structural shortening.
Much of the offshore Makran thrust belt is covered by recent 2-D seismic, and
a new 2100 square km 3D survey. 3D imaging to
seven
seconds permits
interpretation of thrust fault planes to the decollement surface. The 3D has
delineated thirteen structures along a series of imbricate thrusts. The average
areal extent of the closures is 3100 acres.
Due to structural complexity, four wells drilled in the last fifty years
failed to test Panjgur sands observed in outcrop. Gas seeps, gas plumes observed
in the 3D data, and
hydrocarbon
observations in wells indicate an active
hydrocarbon
charge. Gas is economically attractive here because of the proximity
to major South Asian markets with a constantly increasing appetite for clean gas
fuel