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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Tectonic and Stratigraphic
Evolution of Neuquen Basin, Argentina
By
Neuquen Basin is a basin with a long
history of hydrocarbon production. It is the
most productive subandean basin of
Argentina. It is a Mesozoic backarc basin
which evolved into a foredeep basin when a
fold
and thrust belt was formed to the west
beginning in the Upper Cretaceous. The
sedimentary infill ranges from Permo-Triassic to Recent. The sedimentary package
is continental and marine in origin and
was deposited in a generally shallow, slowly
subsiding basin. Relative changes of sea
level were the main factors that help subdivide
the stratigraphy of the basin. Detailed
sequence stratigraphic analysis of carbonates
and evaporites helped define the
mechanisms by which subtle stratigraphic
trap
may have been created.
The Neuquen Dorsal, a positive east-west structure in the relatively undeformed portion of the basin, has been tentatively interpreted as an inversion. This hypothesis must be further analyzed using additional data.
Deformation in the
fold
and thrust belt
took place from the Campanian to
Pliocene, and shows three distinct zones.
From east to west a broad arch is followed
by an intricate series of tight anticlines
formed by both east and west verging
thrusts which use four different decollement surfaces. To the west of these, an east
verging ramp anticline structure is identified,
which involves a deeper decollement
surface.
Recent discoveries will be put into this regional context.
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