About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract

DOI:10.1306/13351548M100861

Comparison of Structural Styles and Giant Hydrocarbon Occurrences within Four Active Previous HitStrikeNext Hit-slip Regions: California, Southern Caribbean, Sumatra, and East China

Paul Mann1

1Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Houston, 312 Science and Research Building 1, Houston, Texas, 77204, U.S.A. (e-mail: [email protected])

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I appreciate the patience of the editor of this volume, Dengliang Gao. I thank Jeff Storms for helping with all graphic design, map compilations in geographic information system, and text editing. Financial support to Mann and Storms was provided by the sponsoring companies of the CBTH (Caribbean Basins, Tectonics and Hydrocarbons) industry consortium. UTIG (University of Texas Institute for Geophysics) contribution no. 2391. Dengliang Gao and an anonymous reviewer provided peer reviews for this chapter.

ABSTRACT

From previous compilations, active Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip tectonic settings include only a small fraction (sim5%) of the world's basins containing giant oil and gas fields. Despite the relative global paucity of oil within Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip margins, several active Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip basins like the San Joaquin and Los Angeles basins of southern California, U.S.A. have produced billions of barrels of oil and deserve special analysis by explorationists to understand the regional geologic and stress controls on their productivity. The purpose of this chapter is to compile structural and tectonic parameters of four active Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip settings characterized by the greatest known concentrations of giant oil and gas fields: faults and mainly onshore basins of the San Andreas fault system in southern and central California; southern Caribbean plate boundary and related onshore and offshore basins in Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago; onshore and offshore plate boundary Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip faults and related basins in the area of Sumatra and Southeast Asia; and onshore and offshore Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip faults and basins in the area of the Bohai Basin of eastern China. Main geologic and tectonic parameters compiled from a variety of public access databases using geographic information system technology for all four of these Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip and hydrocarbon settings include regional plate motions based on global positioning system (GPS)–based geodesy, basin types along the Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip faults are defined using compilations of depth to basement data and include localized pull-aparts and more regional transpressional basins flanking major Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip faults, well-described examples of structural styles along Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip faults based on surface and subsurface mapping mostly related to hydrocarbon exploration, and well-studied structural and stratigraphic traps that accommodate large accumulations of hydrocarbons in each of the four regional study areas. The compilation reconfirms earlier insights into the relationship between regional stresses and structures along major Previous HitstrikeNext Hit-slip faults as well as suggesting that distant subduction zones may control the stress state in some active plate margin-parallel Previous HitstrikeTop-slip faults.

Pay-Per-View Purchase Options

The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.

Watermarked PDF Document: $14
Open PDF Document: $24