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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 94, No. 5 (May 2010), P. 597613.

Copyright copy2010. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI:10.1306/10130909088

Fault linkage and Previous HitgrabenNext Hit stepovers in the Canyonlands (Utah) and the North Sea Previous HitVikingNext Hit Previous HitGrabenNext Hit, with implications for hydrocarbon migration and accumulation

Haakon Fossen,1 Richard A. Schultz,2 Egil Rundhovde,3 Atle Rotevatn,4 Simon J. Buckley5

1Center for Integrated Petroleum Research, Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, P.O. Box 7800, Bergen 5020, Norway; [email protected]
2Geomechanics-Rock Fracture Group, Department of Geological Sciences and Engineering/172, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557; [email protected]
3StatoilHydro, Box 7200, Bergen 5020, Norway; [email protected]
4Center for Integrated Petroleum Research, University of Bergen, Allegaten 41, 5007 Bergen, Norway; present address: Rocksource ASA, P.O. Box 994 Sentrum, Bergen 5808, Norway; [email protected]
5Center for Integrated Petroleum Research, University of Bergen, Allegaten 41, Bergen 5007, Norway; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

Segmented Previous HitgrabenNext Hit systems develop stepovers that have important implications in the exploration of oil and gas in extensional tectonic basins. We have compared and modeled a representative stepover between grabens in Canyonlands, Utah, and the North Sea Previous HitVikingNext Hit Previous HitGrabenNext Hit and, despite their different structural settings, found striking similarities that pertain to other Previous HitgrabenNext Hit systems. In both cases, the stepovers represent relatively high parts within the Previous HitgrabenNext Hit systems that are likely to be among the first to be filled with hydrocarbons generated in deeper parts of the grabens. Furthermore, the relay ramps and smaller fault offsets in stepovers ease hydrocarbon migration and allow stepovers to act as preferred migration routes from deep Previous HitgrabenNext Hit kitchens to structurally higher traps in the basin. Previous HitGrabenNext Hit stepovers and their related structures should be paid special attention during exploration because they may represent hydrocarbon accumulations complementary to larger traps along the Previous HitgrabenNext Hit flanks. These observations explain the location of the Kvitebjorn, Valemon, and Huldra fields in a stepover structure of the Previous HitVikingNext Hit Previous HitGrabenNext Hit and encourage increased focus on similar Previous HitgrabenNext Hit stepovers in the Previous HitVikingNext Hit Previous HitGrabenNext Hit and other Previous HitgrabenTop systems.

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