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Salt Tectonics, Associated sedimentary structures and hydrocarbon Traps

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Title: Salt Tectonics, Associated sedimentary structures and hydrocarbon Traps


1
Salt Tectonics, Associated sedimentary
structures and hydrocarbon Traps
presented byAdeniyi Sanyaolu, Dan Sopher,Nick
Shane Cormac OReilly
MSc Exploration Geophysics School of Earth and
Environment University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT
2
Topics to be covered
  • Depositional environments of Evaporites
  • Physical properties of salt
  • Salt related structures
  • Sedimentary structures associated with salt
  • Role of salt in generation of hydrocarbons
  • Salt related hydrocarbon traps
  • Case study Persian Gulf

3
What are Evaporites?
4
How are Evaporites Deposited
  • Two principle modes of
  • Deposition
  • Subaqueous Precipitation
  • Shallow to deep water
  • Evaporating dish process
  • Periodic replenishment
  • Subaerial Precipitation
  • Subkhas
  • Sediments around salt lakes
  • Oases
  • Evaporite minerals include gypsum, sylvite,
    polyhalite, anhydrite, etc.

5
Where are Evaporites Deposited?
After Tucker ,1991
6
Physical Properties of Salt
  • Denisty 0.00215Kg/cm3
  • Hardness 2.5 (Mohs)
  • Colour clear to white
  • Soluble in water
  • High Ductility
  • High Thermal conductivity
  • Flows easily under pressure and at geological
    timescales by either
  • Pressure solution
  • Dislocation Creep

7
SALT TECTONICS
  • Salt, which is weak and buoyant is found in
    many sedimentary basins where it occur as a weak
    layer between other lithologies, as such it
    behaves like a pressured viscous fluid during
    deformation and tends to flow.
  • Key factors in salt tectonics are
  • Buoyancy (density contrast)
  • Differential Loading
  • Regional Tilt
  • The weakness of salt

8
SALT FLOW
  • A tabular layer of salt can deform either by
    poiseuille flow or couette flow.
  • Poiseulli flow involves the vertical thinning of
    overburden and the lateral extrusion of salt from
    under sediment depocenters.
  • Couette flow on the other hand corresponds to
    layer parallel simple shear as overlying
    sediments translate seaward

9
Extrusion of Salt
10
SALT STRUCTURES
  • Salt flow or movement results in the formation
    of structures. Salt forms two main types of
    structures
  • Salt pillows here the movement of salt results
    in the uplift of overlying lithologies.
  • Salt diapirs here the overlying sediments are
    pierced by the moving salt and diarpirs can be
    of different shapes (Walls, columns, bulbs and
    mushrooms).
  • The geometry of salt structures is dependent on
    the rate of sedimentation and the rate at which
    the salt flows.

11
Salt Dome Growth Stages
  • Salt Dome Growth Stages
  • Seni Jackson (1984)

Seni Jackson (1984)
12
Other processes that enhance salt flow
  • A number of processes are known to thin or
    weaken overburden thereby creating paths or
    spaces for salts to move into. These processes
    include
  • PASSIVE DIAPIRISM
  • MOVEMENT TRIGGERED BY DIFFERENTIAL LOADING
  • MOVEMENT TRIGERRED BY EXTENSION
  • MOVEMENT TRIGERRED BY CONTRACTION
  • MOVEMENT CAUSED BY STRIKE-SLIP FAULTING
  • NEAR DIAPIR DEFORMATION
  • ALLOCHTHONOUS SALT

13
Salt diapirs in seismic section
14
Associated Sedimentary Structures
15
Peripheral Sinks
  • Basins developed due to flow of salt layer.
  • Primary Peripheral sink generated far from diapir
    early in development.
  • Secondary Peripheral sink generated on
    penetration of the upper layers

After Halbouty, 1967
16
Turtles
  • Form Between two adjacent Salt diapirs
  • Salt flow generates accommodation in the centre
    of the basin
  • Continued salt flow leaves anticlinal structures
    that pinch out towards the diapirs Turtles.

After Ordling, 2005
17
Unconformities and lateral changes
After Allen ,1992
18
Effects of salt on h/c maturation
  • Geothermal heat flow is the product of 2 factors
  • Thermal gradient
  • Thermal conductivity variation with depth
  • Thermal conductivity of salt is 3 to 4 times
    greater than that of other sedimentary rocks.
  • Salt body will funnel geothermal heat and cause a
    higher temperature anomaly in the surrounding
    rocks.
  • Anomaly can be up to 2 to 3 times greater than
    what would normally be expected.

19
Effects of salt on h/c maturation
  • Geothermal gradients created by salt structures
    may move surrounding rocks into the maturation
    window.
  • Factors which effect the geothermal gradient of
    salt are
  • (1) size of the salt structure
  • (2) geometrical shape of the salt structure
  • (3) depth of burial
  • Salt structures can produce both positive and
    negative anomalies.
  • Oil maturation window Temperatures of 80 c -
    120 c
  • Gas maturation window Temperatures of 120 c -
    150 c
  • If heat flow anomaly is characterised in detail,
    this can help to better define the geometry of
    the salt body

20
Positive and negative anomalies
21
Hydrocarbon Traps in Salt Provinces
Salt diapirs were the first diapiric structures
to be recognised and best understood due to their
economic importance.
Doming
Graben
The upturned sediments, truncated against the
impermeable salts, provide excellent traps for
hydrocarbons.
Pinch out
Cap rock
Walling
Walling
Unconformity
Flank Faults
Flank Faults
Figure from Allen Allen (1992)
22
Widespread in USA, Mexico, SW Russia, West
Central Africa and Canadian Arctic
   
     
Priority province
     
U.S. province that is ranked among the world
priority provinces
  
Boutique province
23
Case Study Persian Gulf
24
Case Study Persian Gulf
The dark circular patches represent the surface
expression of salt domes that have risen
diapirically from the Cambrian Hormuz salt
horizon through the younger sediments to reach
the surface. Only in a hot arid environment such
as that of the Gulf can the soluble salt escape
rapid erosion.
Source Landsat 7, NASA (2002)
25
Case Study Persian Gulf
  • Extensional rifting of Arabic Plate gt basin
    development gt evaporites deposited up to 2.5km
    thick (Hormuz Series) and up to 4km (Oman Salt
    Basin)
  • Diapiric movement initiated by extensional and
    strike slip movements of Precambrian basement
    block
  • Pathways for salt movement
  • - basement faults cut overlying seds (doming
    walls)
  • - pull apart from wrench fault deflections
  • - reactivation of extensional grabens with salt
    deposits
  • - instability of thick salt beds at the foot of
    tilt blocks (gravity glides)
  • Pillows.. Rim anticlines.. Turtlebacks..

26
Case Study - Persian Gulf
NE
SW
Zagros Reverse Fault
Precambrian Basement
Neoproterozoic Evaporite Basins Develop
Sedimentation continuous Upper Jurassic
evaporite deposits
TIME
Overburden thickens, basement block movements
rejuvenated
Diapirism Upper Jurassic Miocene Cap rocks
faulting and folding
27
Turtleback Structures in the Persian Gulf
  • Marmul Field, South Oman Salt Basin formed by
    initial salt withdrawal and shallow dissolution.
  • Near surface and subsurface meteoric waters
    caused dissolution, evidenced by unconformities

Structural inversion after shallow dissolution
Ara Pillow dissolution
28
Reasons for Prolific Hydrocarbons
  • Uplift of the Zagros ranges in the Pliocene
  • Thick sedimentary sequence (gt18000m) with
    occasional anaerobic intervals, and large basin
  • Rich source rocks at several levels
    (Neoproterozoic, Palaeozoic, Jurassic, Lower
    Cretaceous and Lower Tertiary.
  • Excellent carbonate (faulted) and sandstone
    reservoir rocks with high permeability and
    porosity
  • Cap rocks of salt, anhydrite and shale sealing
    the reservoirs providing multiple stacked
    reservoirs
  • Continuous structural growth of growth of major
    folds, due to salt diapirism or basement block
    uplift
  • Deep seated diapirism, providing 60 of oil
    field structures in the Basin

29
Conclusions
  • Salts deform as a viscous fluid with little or
    no ultimate stress and will flow if subjected to
    minimal shear stress. Flow of salt imposes strain
    on other lithologies they are associated with
    forming different structures
  • Different salt styles control trap styles in
    supra- and subsalt environments and have varying
    effects on sediment transport, deposition, and on
    hydrocarbon generation and migration. Better
    predictive models for reservoirs will be based on
    improved knowledge of mechanisms of salt
  • The presence of salt also effects the maturation
    process of hydrocarbons due to its very high
    thermal conductivity.
  • Some 60 of the ultimate recoverable oil
    reserves of the Persian Gulf Basin originate from
    Salt tectonism, and 40 of the known world oil
    reserves are due to salt diapirism in this basin

30
References
  • Alsop, G. I., Blundell, D. J. Davidson, I.
    (eds), Salt Tectonics, Geological Society Special
    Publications No. 100, 129-151 (1996)
  • Jackson, M. P .A Talbot, C. J., Advances in
    Salt Tectonics. In Continental Deformation
    (Edited by Hancock, P. L.), Pergamon Press,
    159-179, (1994)
  • Allen, P. A., Allen, J. R., Basin Analysis,
    Blackwell (1992)
  • Tucker, M. E., Sedimentary Petrology, Geoscience
    Texts (1991)
  • Halbouty, M. T., Salt Domes, Gulf publishing
    company (1967)
  • Odling, N., EARS5131 course notes, University of
    Leeds, MSC Exploration Geophysics (2005)
  • Nagihara, S., Application of marine heat flow
    data important in oil and gas exploration, (2005)
  • Shaker, S.S., Geopressure compartmentilization in
    salt basins their assessement for hydrocarbon
    entrapment in the gulf of Mexico, Geopressure
    Analysis Services (2004)
  • Letouzey, J., Salt movement, tectonic events, and
    structural style in the central Zagros fold and
    thrust belt. Institut Francais du petrole.(2004)
  • Nagihara, S., Regional synthesis of the
    sedimentary thermal history and hydrocarbon
    maturation in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico.
    Department of Geosciences, Texas State University
    (2003)
  • Mello, U.T., The role of salt in restraining the
    maturation of subsalt source rocks (2000)
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