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Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 90, No. 4 (April 2006), P. 625-655.

Copyright copy2006. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI:10.1306/10110505035

Early and middle Miocene depositional history of the Maracaibo Basin, western Venezuela

Joseacute I. Guzmaacuten,1 William L. Fisher2

1CampC Reservoirs, Inc., 10333 Harwin Drive, Suite 550, Houston, Texas 77036; [email protected]
2John A. and Katherine G. Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78713-8902

ABSTRACT

The uplift of the Sierra de Perijaacute and Meacuterida Andes and the marine connection with the Falcoacuten Basin ultimately controlled the distribution of shallow-marine, coastal, and nonmarine sedimentary rocks in the Maracaibo Basin during the early and middle Miocene. These rocks contain the most important shale top seal in the basin and nearly three-quarters of the produced plus proven reserves of the supergiant Boliacutevar coastal fields.

The Maracaibo Basin has been isolated from extrabasinal drainage systems since the late Oligocene, and sediments derived from the surrounding highlands were either deposited in the basin or delivered into the neighboring Falcoacuten Basin through a narrow marine passage (the westward extension of the Falcoacuten Channel). Four unconformity-bounded sequences mapped in the northeastern sector of the Maracaibo Basin help recreate its regional paleogeography as it was flooded from the northeast through this passage. In the early Miocene, part of the basin became a semi-enclosed shallow-marine gulf, and wave- and tide-modified deltas prograded across the temporarily inactive Lama-Icotea fault system. As sea level dropped, the shoreline advanced eastward of the Falcoacuten Channel, and valleys were incised and subsequently filled by transgressive estuarine sediments. In the next sea level highstand, tidal-bar complexes of a tide-dominated delta system prograded and filled all available accommodation space. In the middle Miocene, relative sea level dropped into the Falcoacuten Basin, and the Maracaibo area became a mixed-load fluvial drainage basin. By late middle Miocene, the two basins were separated, and the Maracaibo Basin became an intermontane fluvial-lacustrine depression.

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