About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 27, No. 3, November 1984. Pages 3-3.

Abstract: The Petroliferous Cuyo Basin as Compared to Argentina's Other Sedimentary Basins - a Geologic Overview

By

Previous HitThomasTop E. O'Connor

Argentina covers nearly one sixth of the South American continent and consists of two major massifs surrounded by a series of intracratonic and marginal cratonic basins. The western margin basins have been markedly deformed by the formation of the Andes mountain chain during the Late Mesozoic/Early Tertiary.

The two massifs are Precambrian in age. The first consists of the southern extension of the Brazilian Shield and underlies much of northeastern Argentina. The second, the southern, Patagonian/Deseado Massif, is more enigmatic and appears to have been sutured onto the Brazilian Shield near the end of the Paleozoic. There is considerable controversy concerning its origin and original location, as well as the nature of the suturing of the two massifs.

Associated with the Brazilian Shield are two marine Paleozoic basins in the northern portion d the country. The Tarija Basin is largely represented in Bolivia where it is the center of considerable exploration for and production of natural gas. Farther east is the large, intracratonic Chaco- Parana Basin which extends southwesterly from Paraguay and Brazil. To date it has proved to be barren of hydrocarbons.

Along the western and southern margins of the enlarged Mesozoic continental mass of Argentina is a series of marine basins which were present prior to the collision and onset of subduction of the Pacific plate during  Late Mesozoic/Early Tertiary. These western, leading edge basins were originally simple in format and structural style until the overprint of the Andean Orogeny and associated eastward-verging overthrusts deformed their western margins. To varying degrees, all of the marginal cratonic basins have proved to be hydrocarbon- bearing, including recent discoveries in the Magallanes/Malvinas area. At regular intervals along the eastern, trailing edge of the Argentine portion of the continental plum is a series of continental intracratonic Mesozoic basins which are aligned at right angles to the present-day coastline. There is inconclusive evidence that these basins deepen and become more marine toward the margin of the continental shelf. With the exception of the San Jorge Basin, these eastern basins have so far been barren of hydrocarbons.

In contrast to the foregoing, the Cup Basin in the Mendoza Province of northwestern Argentina is Triassic to Cretaceous in age, is taphrogenic in origin, is interior to the then continental margin, and is entirely continental in its sedimentary fill. It also contains the La Ventana/Vaca Muerta Field complex which produces primarily from Triassic conglomerates and is the largest single oil field complex in Argentina. The basin had its origin as a rift graben complex floored almost everywhere with volcanoclastics. Penecontemporaneous with the subsidence of the graben was the deposition of thick, black, lacustrine shales which coarsen upward to red conglomerates as rift-related extension ceased and thermal subsidence set in. This event was marked by extensive volcanic flows which locally served as the seal for the lacustrine generated oil that had migrated into the reservoir section underlying the flows. A northward, basinward-plunging nose has served to localize petroleum accumulations, with southern closure being provided by minor structural reversals or by the updip shaling out of the conglomerate reservoir. The interior location of the basin preserved it from most of the subsequent Andean-related deformation.

End_of_Record - Last_Page 3---------------

Copyright © 2005 by Houston Geological Society. All rights reserved.