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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 31, No. 8, April 1989. Pages 9-10.

Abstract: Offshore Brazil Geology and Hydrocarbon Potential

By

John L. Weiner

Fourteen basins lie offshore along the 7000-kilometer rifted and divergent margin of Brazil. Three tectonic-stratigraphic sequences characterize the geologic Previous HitframeworkNext Hit of many of these marginal basins: 1) an Early Cretaceous rift sequence, 2) an Aptian evaporite sequence, and 3) a Late Cretaceous to Recent passive margin sequence. The latter sequence consists of platform carbonates followed by transgressive-regressive clastics with turbidite sandstones encased in marine shales.

Offshore Brazilian exploration was initiated by Petrobras, the state-owned oil company, in 1968. At the start of 1988, more than 410,000 barrels of Brazil's daily production of 590,000 barrels came from offshore wells. Almost 370,000 barrels per day were produced from the Campos Previous HitbasinNext Hit alone. The Campos Previous HitbasinNext Hit, a nearly "ideal" example of a Brazilian marginal Previous HitbasinNext Hit, contains the bulk of Brazil's known reserves. Oil is produced from fault traps in the rift sequence, from platform carbonates on rollovers induced by salt flowage and from stratigraphic traps in Late Cretaceous to Miocene-age turbidites. The giant Albacora and Marlim turbidite fields, discovered in 1984 and 1985, respectively, lie in waters 300 to 2000 meters deep and contain an estimated 1.1 and 3.6 billion barrels of recoverable oil, respectively. Source rocks for these and other fields in the Campos Previous HitbasinNext Hit and for five other producing offshore basins, are the lacustrine to transitional shales of the Early Cretaceous rift sequence. Faults, windows in the evaporites and unconformities have served as conduits for migrating hydrocarbons. Marine shales of the Late Cretaceous transgressive subsequence are mature in a few basins, but have poorer source-rock characteristics than shales in the rift sequence.

In addition to the Campos Previous HitbasinTop, a number of other Brazilian marginal basins will be described and their hydrocarbon favorability assessed.

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