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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
DOI: 10.1306/011817DIG17032
Mut Basin, Turkey: Miocene
carbonate
depositional styles and mixed systems in an icehouse setting
carbonate
depositional styles and mixed systems in an icehouse setting
Phil Bassant,1 Xavier Janson,2 Frans van Buchem,3 Kemal Gurbuz,4 and Kadir Eriş5
1Total E&P Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd., 331 North Bridge Rd, #12-03 Odeon Towers, Singapore 188720; [email protected]
2Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, University Station, Box X, Austin, Texas 78713-1534; [email protected]
3Maersk Oil, Esplanaden 50, Copenhagen, Denmark; present address: Halliburton-Landmark Exploration Insights, 97 Jubilee Avenue, Milton Park, Abingdon, OX14 4RW, United Kingdom; [email protected]
4Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Geological Engineering Department, University of Çukurova, 01330, Balcalı-Sarıçam, Adana, Turkey; [email protected]
5Faculty of Mines, Geology Department, Istanbul Technical University, Ayazaga Campus, 34469 Maslak, İstanbul-Turkey; [email protected]
ABSTRACT
The Mut Basin in southcentral Turkey contains a rich variety of Cenozoic
carbonate
deposits that developed on a complex pre-Miocene topography and can be studied in seismic-scale, three-dimensional outcrops. These include open and rimmed
carbonate
shelves with steep slopes, small isolated platforms, and mixed
carbonate
–siliciclastic systems showing reciprocal sedimentation. The exceptional preservations of the stratal geometries make it possible to easily link large-scale depositional geometry to depositional facies in a variety of platform types and depositional environments. The Mut Basin provides a better understanding of (1) the control of antecedent topography on
carbonate
platform development, (2) the influence of icehouse conditions (e.g., high-amplitude, high-frequency sea level fluctuations) on the
carbonate
system, (3) the link between faunal evolution and the style of
carbonate
platforms and stratigraphic architecture, (4) lateral and reciprocal
carbonate
and siliciclastic sedimentation, (5) platform asymmetry and local controls on stratal geometries, and (6) the architecture of steep
carbonate
margin and associated gravitational collapse deposits. These concepts are directly applicable to time-equivalent Cenozoic
carbonate
reservoir systems in Southeast Asia, the southern Caribbean, and the eastern Mediterranean.
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