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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
DOI: 10.1306/07232423121
High-resolution sequence stratigraphic analysis and depositional environment reinterpretation of the Jurassic–Cretaceous Fortune Bay and Hibernia Formations in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin, east coast Canada
Wen Lin,1 Ryan M. Zahynacz,2 and Tim Thompson3
1Suncor Energy, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
2Suncor Energy, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
3Suncor Energy, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
ABSTRACT
Stratigraphic evolution of tectonically active synrift basins is challenging to reveal due to the complex interplay between eustasy and tectonics. The lithostratigraphic approach fails to restore different lithological units in correct temporal order and masks the discovery of subtle stratigraphic plays. The Jeanne d’Arc Basin, offshore east coast Canada, presents difficulties regarding temporal reservoir correlation and paleogeographic reconstruction. In this study, we established a high-resolution sequence stratigraphic framework of the Lower Cretaceous Hibernia Formation in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin. Three composite (sensu third-order) sequences consisting of 21 parasequences are interpreted with well-defined flooding surfaces and sequence boundaries, based on the combination of seismic, well-log, and core data. Each composite sequence comprises three systems tracts, four of which are selected as mapping units for synchronous paleogeographic reconstruction. Paleogeographic mapping shows different facies distribution in the same geologic times and how they evolved through time. Detailed paleogeographic mapping demonstrates the sequence stratigraphic cyclicity of marine-fluvial-marine and correlates different reservoir units between producing fields. The basal Hibernia sand interval has been reinterpreted to be a marine sandstone package of the highstand systems tract of the underlying Fortune Bay Formation. The results enhance the predictability of reservoir presence and distribution as well as the paired seal intervals at different stratigraphic levels. This work opens new play types, such as the Fortune Bay highstand shoreface play and the transgressive barrier island play, that support the continued exploration of the basin.
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