Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality

SE Asian carbonate formations have been reviewed with the aim of understanding the influence of tectonics on their development and reservoir potential through the Cenozoic. Regional tectonics, via plate movements, extensional basin formation, and uplift, was the dominant control on the location of c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wilson, Moyra, Hall, R.
Other Authors: WA Morgan
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Society for Sedimentary Geology, Special Publication 95 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28592
_version_ 1848752578526969856
author Wilson, Moyra
Hall, R.
author2 WA Morgan
author_facet WA Morgan
Wilson, Moyra
Hall, R.
author_sort Wilson, Moyra
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description SE Asian carbonate formations have been reviewed with the aim of understanding the influence of tectonics on their development and reservoir potential through the Cenozoic. Regional tectonics, via plate movements, extensional basin formation, and uplift, was the dominant control on the location of carbonate deposits. These processes controlled the movement of shallow marine areas into the tropics, together with their emergence and disappearance. Although ~ 70% of the 250 shallow marine carbonate formations in SE Asia were initiated as attached features, 90% of economic hydrocarbon discoveries are in carbonate strata developed over antecedent topography, of which more than 75% were isolated platforms. Faulted highs influenced the siting of nearly two thirds of carbonates developed over antecedent topography. Around a third of carbonate units formed in intra- and interarc areas; however, economic reservoirs are mainly in backarc and rift-margin settings ( ~ 40% each). Carbonate edifices show evidence of syntectonic sedimentation through: (1) fault-margin collapse and resedimentation, (2) fault segmentation of platforms, (3) tilted strata and differential generation of accommodation space, and (4) modification of internal sequence character and facies distribution. The demise of many platforms, particularly those forming economic reservoirs, was influenced by tectonic subsidence, often in combination with eustatic sea-level rise and environmental perturbations. Fractures, if open or widened by dissolution, enhance reservoir quality. However, fracturing may also result in compartmentalization of reservoirs through formation of fault gouge, or fault leakage via compromised seal integrity. This study will help in reservoir prediction in complex tectonic regions as the petroleum industry focuses on further exploration and development of economically important carbonate reservoirs.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:10:51Z
format Book Chapter
id curtin-20.500.11937-28592
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:10:51Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Society for Sedimentary Geology, Special Publication 95
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-285922023-01-13T07:56:32Z Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality Wilson, Moyra Hall, R. WA Morgan AD George PM Harris JA Kupecz JF Sarg SE Asian carbonate formations have been reviewed with the aim of understanding the influence of tectonics on their development and reservoir potential through the Cenozoic. Regional tectonics, via plate movements, extensional basin formation, and uplift, was the dominant control on the location of carbonate deposits. These processes controlled the movement of shallow marine areas into the tropics, together with their emergence and disappearance. Although ~ 70% of the 250 shallow marine carbonate formations in SE Asia were initiated as attached features, 90% of economic hydrocarbon discoveries are in carbonate strata developed over antecedent topography, of which more than 75% were isolated platforms. Faulted highs influenced the siting of nearly two thirds of carbonates developed over antecedent topography. Around a third of carbonate units formed in intra- and interarc areas; however, economic reservoirs are mainly in backarc and rift-margin settings ( ~ 40% each). Carbonate edifices show evidence of syntectonic sedimentation through: (1) fault-margin collapse and resedimentation, (2) fault segmentation of platforms, (3) tilted strata and differential generation of accommodation space, and (4) modification of internal sequence character and facies distribution. The demise of many platforms, particularly those forming economic reservoirs, was influenced by tectonic subsidence, often in combination with eustatic sea-level rise and environmental perturbations. Fractures, if open or widened by dissolution, enhance reservoir quality. However, fracturing may also result in compartmentalization of reservoirs through formation of fault gouge, or fault leakage via compromised seal integrity. This study will help in reservoir prediction in complex tectonic regions as the petroleum industry focuses on further exploration and development of economically important carbonate reservoirs. 2010 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28592 Society for Sedimentary Geology, Special Publication 95 restricted
spellingShingle Wilson, Moyra
Hall, R.
Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
title Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
title_full Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
title_fullStr Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
title_full_unstemmed Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
title_short Tectonic influence on SE Asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
title_sort tectonic influence on se asian carbonate systems and their reservoir quality
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28592