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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Interfering Cretaceous and Tertiary Rift Systems of the
Turkana Depression (Sudan-Ethiopia-Kenya).
1RPS Energy
2Darnoc Ltd
3Independent Consultant
The Turkana Depression has for some time been the subject
of speculation regarding the geometric relationship of an
obvious Miocene rift system crossing between Kenya and
Ethiopia and an older sequence of rifts – oblique to the
East
African Rift System (EARS) – that is evident in the Mesozoic
Anza Graben of Kenya and the Muglad and Melut systems of
southern Sudan. Up to five phases of rifting
potentially affected the area. The Early Cretaceous
to Paleogene systems of the Anza, Muglad and
Melut basins, (ca. 120Ma, 70Ma and 40Ma) have
been overprinted by theMiocene
East
African Rift
system (ca. 20 Ma and 10 Ma). Crucially a lack of
geological or geophysical data has hampered an
understanding of this
critical
area of interfering
rift systems.
The
East
African Rift System of Tertiary age is
predominantly located in zones of Precambrian
orogenic belts, avoiding stable Archaean cratonic
areas. The geometry of the rift system is largely
controlled by the Precambrian mobile belt
architecture; however, later extensional events of
Permo-Triassic (Karoo), Jurassic, Cretaceous, and
Palaeogene ages have also affected the location
and orientation of the Tertiary rift systems to a
greater or lesser degree. A major challenge in the
area is that outcrops comprise either volcanic
rocks or metamorphic basements with few
sedimentar y sequences that might give
indications of
East
African or earlier rift systems.
Seismic control was restricted to mid-1980’s vintage data shot over the Lotikipi and Gatome basins of northwest Kenya by Amoco, plus ship-borne Project PROBE data acquired over the Lake Turkana rift. There was also sparse gravity data over a large part of the depression, outside of Kenya.
A pioneering, tri-nation airborne gravity and
magnetic survey that was flown offered a new
insight into the complex rift geometry of the
Turkana Depression. The survey
revealed an interfering older rift system
running from the Anza into the
Muglad-Melut systems. Cretaceous
rifting extends from the Anza Graben
through the Turkana region and links
with the Sudanese rifting of the Muglad and Melut basins.
Maastrichtian rifting appears to extend northwestwards from the
Anza Graben, and may be present within basins of SW Ethiopia
and northern Kenya. Similar rifting occurred in the Eocene, and
Oligocene-Miocene rifting is evident in the wester Turkana basins.
Middle to Late Miocene
East
African rifting cross-cuts all of these
earlier rift geometries.
Source rocks are known in the Miocene of Ethiopia and Kenya and in the Oligocene (?Eocene) of the Loperot-1 well, and they are predicted to occur in the earlier rift phases. In southwest Ethiopia, north of the Turkana Depression, Middle Miocene oil-shales and coals have been shown to have excellent source rock properties, and equivalents may be preserved within the EARS. The presence of marine Cretaceous sequences is supportive evidence of earlier source rocks. Suitable reservoirs are developed in all tectono-stratigraphic phases of rifting. The interfering rifts of the Turkana Depression provide several new exciting exploration plays and the probability of numerous trapping scenarios. Undoubted challenges are presented by the complex thermal history and the presence of volcanics and volcanic activity.
Figure 1:
East
African topography showing the Afar and
East
African Domes separatd by
the Turkana Depression
Figure 2: Airborne survey flight lines over pre-survey outlines of potentail rifts
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