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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Seismic Stratigraphy of the Miocene-Pliocene Segitiga
Platform, East Natuna Sea Indonesia: The Origin,
Growth and Demise of an Isolated Carbonate Platform
By
ConocoPhillips
Houston, TX
Seismic stratigraphy and seismic facies analysis provide a useful methodology for the genetic understanding of carbonate platform systems during exploration, initial assessment, and early field development (e.g. sparse well data). A high-resolution 2D seismic survey covering 7500 square kilometers allows documentation of the evolution of a Miocene- Pliocene carbonate platform in the East Natuna Sea, Indonesia. The Segitiga Platform (1400 sq. km.) contains Terumbu Formation carbonates up to 1800 meters thick that were deposited in platform interior, reef and shoal margin, and slope to basin environments of an isolated carbonate platform.
The Segitiga Platform was subdivided into
twelve seismic sequences that demonstrate a history of: 1) initial
isolation, 2) progradation and coalescence, 3) backstepping and
shrinkage, and 4) terminal drowning. Seismic facies maps indicate
that the Segitiga Platform originated as three smaller platforms
on extensional fault block highs. Deep intraplatform seaways
separated these platforms. Progradation of shallow-water
carbonates filled the seaways during a
phase
of coalescence and
the three platforms were amalgamated to form a composite
platform (1400 sq. km; middle-upper Miocene). A rapid relative
rise in sea level at the end of Miocene time caused a major backstepping
of the carbonate margins (and a concomitant drowning
of the adjacent Natuna Field carbonates to the east) resulting in a
platform of reduced size (600 sq. km) during the lower Pliocene.
Rapid subsidence, combined with a eustatic rise at the end of the
early Pliocene caused terminal drowning of the Segitiga Platform.
The platform was buried by younger siliciclastics of the Muda
Formation.
Eustatic sea-level change controlled the timing of sequence
boundary formation, but structural movements modified internal
sequence character and facies distribution. Faulting created
topography that acted as templates for the
initiation of carbonate platform deposition,
as well as providing pedestals for the
localization of backstepped platforms.
Cessation of faulting may have allowed
progradation to occur due to a reduction in
the rate of increasing accommodation.
Regional subsidence may have controlled
the location and extent of platform backstepping.
Geographic variability in sequence
stacking of coeval platform margins is
observed over relatively short distances.
Progradation is most strongly developed on
the leeward side of the platform, but
increased accommodation due to rapid local subsidence or
changing oceanographic currents also influenced the direction
and
magnitude
of progradation.
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