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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract:
Hydrocarbon
Geology of
Southern Offshore Malta
Hydrocarbon
Geology of
Southern Offshore MaltaBy
The study area is 4.4 km. south of Malta, and encompasses
13,000 sq. km. Studies of over 4700 km. of new and
reprocessed geophysical data were conducted in 1989-90.
These data, supported by stratigraphic projections from the
Ragusa basin of Sicily and the Pelagian shelf off Tunisia and
Libya
, indicate an entirely different facies from the continuous
carbonate sequence of the Malta platform encountered
by wells drilled to date.
Area 4 is part of the Pelagian block, a stable projection of the African continental margin, bounded on the east by the Ionian abyssal basin; on the west by the N-S axis of Tunisia; on the north by the Calabrian thrust zone; and on the south by the Djeffara flexure. Geologic structures in the study area range from a broad featureless rise to complex horst and graben systems. The latter are mostly of Miocene- Pliocene age, but one graben is believed to represent an early Mesozoic rift associated with breakup of the Pangaea continent.
Carbonates, mostly shallow-water, of Triassic and
Jurassic ages were penetrated north of the study area, but
source rocks similar to those of the Ragusa basin are
postulated in the Mesozoic rift. Several wells encountered
Upper Jurassic-Cretaceous carbonates, mostly restricted shelf
dolomite, but pelagic limestone beneath a tongue of
dolomite at Aqualta-1 indicates this well to be near the
southern edge of the Malta platform. During Cretaceous
time most of the study area was transitional between
platform and basin, and deeper-water strata, which are
proven or potential source rocks and seals in Tunisia,
should be present. Shelf-edge carbonates will provide good
reservoirs, and rudistid reefs probably developed on bathymetric
highs. A low-velocity interval at the base of Tertiary
section, which wedges out in the southwestern portion of
the study area, is expected to contain nummulitid bank
facies in contact with deeper-water limestone and marl,
which are the source of oil in the giant fields off Tunisia and
Libya
.
Based on the geothermal gradient at Aqualta-1, the top
of the oil window may be about 3000m., and since the entire
Jurassic section is below 3500m., it should be capable of
peak oil generation. Cretaceous source rocks reached
maturity in the southeastern part of the study area during
Miocene time and elsewhere since the Pliocene. Restored
seismic sections indicate onset of generation at the end of
Cretaceous time, when many structures already were
positive, others having developed since then. A variety of
potential traps, including fault-block, horst, faulted and
simple domes and anticlines, are present, together with the
very impressive Lower Tertiary wedge-out. Thus, Area 4 is
highly prospective and has potential for major
hydrocarbon
reserves.
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