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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Early Cretaceous Paleogeography of
Gabon/Northeastern Brazil -
A Tectono-
Stratigraphic
Model Based
on Propagating Rifts
Stratigraphic
Model Based
on Propagating RiftsBy
Regional gravity and seismic data, the region's present-day
structural and
stratigraphic
configuration, and comparison
with other rift systems worldwide led to the
development of a rift model for Gabon and northeastern
Brazil that involves two propagating megafracture systems
that interacted in a very complex fashion. In both regions,
the distribution of pre-salt Early Cretaceous reservoirs and
source rocks was controlled by the rift phase in progress at
the time of deposition. A series of regional paleogeographic
reconstructions depict the development of the rift stratigraphy,
and illustrate how the dual rift model explains the
geometry and subsidence history of both the Reconcavo/
Tucano/Jatoba rift system, which was the first branch of the
northward-propagating fracture system, and the Sergipe-
Alagoas/lnterior Basin/N'Komi rift system, which was the
first branch of the southward-propagating fracture system.
Evidence suggests that during latest Jurassic through Early Cretaceous (Valanginian) time, the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin of northeast Brazil and the Gabon Interior Basin were linked by a transfer zone that formed opposing asymmetric half-grabens. During this time, the northern part of the present-day Interior Basin was located on the southwestward dipping ramp margin of a series of en-echelon, Sergipe- Alagoas Basin related half-grabens. The central part of the basin consisted of the transfer/accommodation zone, while the southern part was positioned in a half-graben ramping to the northeast. This configuration is supported by the marked change in regional structural styles seen seismically across the region. Measured N'Dombo sandstone paleocurrent directions and mapped sandstone geometries support the model illustrating early ramp side and axial drainage in the expected orientations throughout the Interior Basin.
Beginning as early as Hauterivian time, the locus of
extension and deposition began to step westward in
northern Gabon with the development of the Axial
Fault
in
the southern portion of the Interior Basin, and the N'Toum
Fault
in the northern portion of the basin. During
Barremian-Aptian time, the southern Interior Basin portion
of the southward-propagating fracture system was largely
abandoned as active faulting and extension shifted further
inboard, to the west of the Lambarene Horst. A similar but
opposite progression occurred in Brazil, as active deposition
and rifting moved to the east, ending first in the Jatobal
Tucano/Reconcavo rift system, and finally in the Sergipe-
Alagoas Basin. By Aptian time, crustal attenuation was
complete and the final stages of continental breakup were
underway with the emplacement of proto-oceanic crust.
Transtension occurred in northern Gabon and in its
Brazilian counterpart, the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin, as South
America moved obliquely away from Africa.
The paleogeographic reconstructions served as a geologically
reasonable and consistent structural/
stratigraphic
framework on which individual basin interpretations were
built. They helped to guide the
interpretation
of basin-wide
isopachs, which were created for potential reservoirs,
source rocks and seals using all available well, outcrop and
seismic control. This approach enabled a better understanding
of the area's complex structural and
stratigraphic
rift
evolution, and helped provide reasonably accurate
stratigraphic
predictions in relatively undrilled areas.
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