About This Item
- Full text of this item is not available.
- Abstract PDFAbstract PDF(no subscription required)
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Source and Reservoir Rock Factors
Tertiary Hydrocarbon Accumulations and
Basins of Coastal South America
By
Pacific and Caribbean coastal Tertiary basins of South
America exhibit a wide variety of clastic fill. Some basins are
sand-starved relative to others which are sand-rich. These
differences cannot be explained by utilizing the classical
tectonic-sedimentary approach of source area relief, distance
tectonic intensity or lithology. Many of the basins studied are
approximately equal with respect to these factors but contain
markedly different fill. Caribbean basins tend to be sand-rich,
while Pacific basins are usually sand-poor.
The potential for high organic content in shales of these
basins appears fairly uniform when based upon the
occurrence of oceanic upwelling zones during the Cretaceous
- Tertiary. The Pacific and Caribbean areas appear to be sites of
greatest potential, the Atlantic basins less so.
Oceanic and atmospheric circulation appears to have
played a significant role in influencing the distribution of
potential source rocks and may have acted as the controlling
factor over the processes responsible for the generation,
transport, and deposition of reservoir sandstones. By mapping
these circulation patterns on paleogeographic maps, it is
generally possible to predict in advance of drilling, those
basins that should contain the fortuitous combination of
potential source rocks and reservoir sandstones, and those
that should not.
Case studies of oil fields and basins along western Ecuador, Peru, Chile, northern Columbia, Venezuela, and
eastern Brazil are discussed. End_of_Record - Last_Page 4---------------