Stratigraphic and time-stratigraphic cross sections of Phanerozoic rocks along line C-C', Uinta and Piceance basin area, southern Uinta Mountains to northern Henry Mountains, Utah

1991 ◽  
10.1144/m53.7 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 187-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. O. Wilson

AbstractExploration of the Jurassic hydrocarbon system in the Arabian Intrashelf Basin area is in a mature state. Given the scale of the present day anticlinal structures and the adjacent synclines, all of the supergiant conventional fields trapped in huge anticlines have already been discovered. The theme throughout this Memoir has been to present the evolution of the self-contained Callovian–Tithonian Arabian Intrashelf Basin hydrocarbon system. Its size, c. 1200 × 450 km, is greater than that of the UK, larger than the Black Sea and almost as large as Turkey or the area of Texas and New Mexico in the USA. It is geologically much simpler than these regions, both in the exceptionally remarkable continuity of facies within the sequences that developed and filled the intrashelf basin and its relative tectonic simplicity, including up to the present day. The cross-sections, facies maps, depositional profiles and other data and interpretations presented in this Memoir have documented this remarkable continuity. The source rock interval is well-defined everywhere it occurs and is mature; enough oil has been generated and migrated so that every sealed trap with reservoir facies will have oil. Around and within the basin, shallow water ramp facies in each sequence are in the reservoir facies and the early-formed porosity has been preserved. The carbonate seals and, even more so, the evaporite seals are remarkably laterally continuous. Therefore the big issue in future exploration is finding a sealed trap with potential reserves large enough to be worth drilling when compared to known reserves and estimates of future production. This chapter discusses some possibilities for stratigraphic traps and unconventional plays. Potential plays have been and/or can be identified, but finding them in the present day structural setting is likely to be very difficult.


2006 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 53-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asger Ken Pedersen ◽  
Lotte Melchior Larsen ◽  
Gunver Krarup Pedersen ◽  
Keld S. Dueholm

In 2006 an important milestone will be reached in the study of the three-dimensional structure and architecture of the Nuussuaq Basin in West Greenland. The fifth and last of a series of detailed geological profiles through the sedimentary and volcanic rocks of the Nuussuaq Basin on Disko and Nuussuaq will be published (Fig. 1). At the same time, the last geological map at scale 1:100 000 of the basin area will be completed. These studies have been carried out over more than two decades by a group of scientists within Geocenter Copenhagen and the Technical University of Denmark. The five geological profiles are at scale 1:20 000 and have been published as coloured plates in the same format as the geological maps (Pedersen et al. 1993, 2002a, 2003, 2005, 2006). In total, the profiles cover about 500 km of cross-sections through a classic sedimentary-volcanic basin and its crystalline basement. This is one of the best exposed basins of its kind on Earth, and it serves as a reference area for studies of similar basins on the continental shelves of Greenland, north-western Europe and elsewhere.


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