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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Plate Tectonic Controls of Hydrocarbon
Traps in Carbonate Rocks
By
Hydrocarbon traps occur in a variety of plate tectonic
settings, each imparting a certain control on the depositional
and
diagenetic
aspects of carbonate reservoirs. A knowledge
of
trap
-type in each tectonic environment is very useful for
defining exploration concepts in frontier regions where paucity
of subsurface information forces the explorationist to depend
solely on seismic data.
In the extensional plate-tectonic setting, during the early
stage of rifting, carbonate traps can form on shoals marginal to
fresh-water lakes which occupy intra-cratonic grabens. The
post-breakup transgression generally results in deposition of
salt which is overlain by a carbonate shelf. Salt tectonics
control the configuration of carbonate traps as well as the
depositional and
diagenetic
aspects of the reservoir. Within
rifted continental margins, a majority of the carbonate traps
occur in shelf facies behind ocean-facing reef complexes
which are generally cemented in the marine environment.
Shelf-margin reefal complexes which were subsequently
subjected to a late tectonic phase may be viable exploration
targets.
In a convergent plate-tectonic setting, carbonate shelves marginal to the backarc basin are ideal sites for hydrocarbon accumulations. Within the continental-collision setting, carbonate ramps on the cratonic side of foreland basins provide for major hydrocarbon accumulations. Carbonate formations involved in overthrust structures can be sites of giant petroleum accumulations.
The trans-tensional and the trans-compressional wrench-fault
setting can create favorable environmental and
diagenetic
conditions for carbonate traps.
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