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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

DOI:10.1306/12031212093

Permian–Holocene tectonostratigraphic evolution of the Mandal High, Central Graben, North Sea

Anders Rossland,1 Alejandro Escalona,2 Rinn Rolfsen3

1Department of Petroleum Engineering, University of Stavanger, 4036 Stavanger, Norway; present address: Suncor Energy Norge Aksjeselskap, Lokkeveien 103, 4007 Stavanger, Norway; [email protected]
2Department of Petroleum Engineering, University of Stavanger, 4036 Stavanger, Norway; [email protected]
3Nexen Exploration Norge Aksjeselskap, Stavanger, Norway; present address: Verbundnetz Gas Norge Aksjeselskap, Laberget 22, 4020 Stavanger, Norway; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

A three-dimensional seismic data set and published data from exploration wells were used to reconstruct the tectonostratigraphic evolution of the Mandal High area, southern North Sea, Norway. The Mandal High is an elongated southeast-northwest–trending horst. Three fault families in the Lower Permian sequence, inherited from the basement structural grain of Caledonian origin, are interpreted: (1) a north-northwest–south-southeast–striking fault family, (2) a northeast-southwest–striking fault family, and (3) a near east-west–striking fault family. In addition, an east-southeast–west-northwest–striking fault family (4) that formed during Late Jurassic rifting and was reverse reactivated in the Late Cretaceous is interpreted. We suggest that inversion occurred because of small dextral motion along fault family 1. A final fault family (5) displays various strike orientations and is associated with salt movements.

Seven chronostratigraphic sequences defined by well data and recognized on three-dimensional seismic data are interpreted and mapped: Early Permian rifting in a continental environment; Late Permian deposition of the Zechstein salt and flooding; Triassic continental rifting; uplift and erosion in the Middle Jurassic with deposition of shallow-marine and deltaic sediments; rifting and transgression in a deep-marine environment during the Late Jurassic; a post-rift phase in a marine environment during the Early Cretaceous; and flooding and deposition of the Chalk Group in the Late Cretaceous. An eighth sequence was interpreted—Paleogene–Neogene—but has not been studied in detail. This sequence is dominated by progradation from the east and basin subsidence. Well and seismic data over the Mandal High reveal that large parts of the high were subaerially exposed from Late Permian to Late Jurassic or Early Cretaceous, providing a local source of sediments for adjacent basins.

Similar to the Utsira High, where several large hydrocarbon discoveries have been recently seen, the Mandal High might consist of a set of petroleum plays, including fractured crystalline basement and shallow-marine systems along the flanks of the high, thereby opening up future exploration opportunities.

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