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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 46, No. 7, March 2004. Pages 15 and 17.

Abstract: Upper Miocene and Pliocene Gas and Oil Plays in the Macuspana Basin, Southeastern Mexico

By

William A. Ambrose1, Khaled Fouad1, Previous HitRebeccaTop Jones1, Mark Holtz1, Shinichi Sakurai1, Edgar Guevara1, Javier Meneses-Rocha2, Leonardo Aguilera2, Lino Miranda2, Roberto Rojas2, José Morales2, José Berlanga2, Suhas C. Talukdar3, and Tim Wawrzyniec4
1Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin
2Pemex, México
3Consultant
4University of New Mexico, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences

The Bureau of Economic Geology and Pemex Exploración y Producción conducted an integrated study of the geological, geochemical and play framework of the upper Miocene and Pliocene in the Macuspana basin, Mexico, using a variety of well, core and 2-D and 3-D seismic data (Fig. 1). Structural controls for the plays consist of deep-seated faults that tap Mesozoic thermogenic gas sources, areas of intense shale diapirism and folding and areas with structural inversion that could enhance trapping and reservoir productivity. Early Neogene thrusting south of the basin triggered evacuation of Oligocene shale along northwest-dipping listric faults in the eastern and southeastern margin of the basin. These faults are associated with large-scale rollover structures and thick (>500 m) upper Miocene shoreface and wave-dominated, deltaic complexes. Traps occur as both four-way and three-way structural- stratigraphic combinations. Reservoir seal is provided by a 100- to 300-m lower Pliocene transgressive shale. Downdip pinch-out of reservoir-quality shoreface sandstones is a key risk factor in the upper Miocene in the onshore part of the basin. In contrast, the offshore, upper Miocene section consists of deep water slope systems downdip of an inferred clastic-carbonate source associated with the Yucatán Platform. Thin, calcareous, turbidite sandstones lapped onto a major turtle structure, potentially providing updip-porosity pinch-outs.

A second phase of extension in the early Pliocene formed a set of broad, southeast-dipping listric faults in the western basin, controlling thick accumulations of stacked Pliocene shoreface deposits. Sandy Pliocene shoreface depocenters formed in shale-withdrawal sub-basins, primarily in the northwestern part of the basin. Trap formation and enhancement in the southern basin margin are linked to late Miocene-to-Pliocene inversion. Unlike in the more productive upper Miocene, reservoir seal is a major risk factor in upper and middle Pliocene reservoirs having few thick upper bounding shales

Figure 1. (a) Location of the Macuspana Basin, with structural elements. (b) Well control and distribution of 3-D surveys and principal 2-D seismic lines used in the study.

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Three petroleum systems (Mesozoic, Paleogene/Lower Neogene and Upper Miocene/Pliocene) contributed to the hydrocarbon accumulations and to hydrocarbon generation and migration in the basin. Principal Upper Jurassic/Lower Cretaceous source rocks generated wet thermogenic gases and oil. Secondary, lower Tertiary source rocks generated predominantly dry, biogenic gases. Mixtures of the two gas types are common. Numerous deep-seated growth faults and other faults serve as pathways for Mesozoic-sourced hydrocarbons. Surface seeps and abundant gas shows suggest that hydrocarbons are being generated today.

This study was published in the September 2003 Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (volume 87, number 3, p. 1411–1435). AAPG members can access the text and figures at the AAPG website: http://www.aapg.org/.

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