Timan-Pechora Basin and Basins
of the Barents Sea Shelf
Gregory Ulmishek
More than 50 oil and gas fields with recoverable reserves of about 3.4
billion bbl of oil and 20 tcf of gas have been discovered in the Timan-Pechora
basin. The major part of reserves is concentrated in clastics of Middle
Devonian
age and in the upper part of the Carboniferous-Lower Permian carbonate sequence.
The Ordovician-Lower Devonian, Upper Devonian-Lower Carboniferous, and Upper
Permian-Triassic sequences are much less productive. Upper Devonian bituminous
shales and carbonates (Domanik facies) that were deposited in a large
intrashelf
depression constitute the major
source
rock formation. Many fields, including
the giant Usa oil field, are controlled by a system of northwest-trending
inverted-graben rifts. Hercynian Ural foredeeps superimposed during the
Permian-T iassic on older northwestern structures are gas prone. The
Timan-Pechora basin geology is traced some distance offshore, but the
prospective Paleozoic sequence progressively dips northward under thick Upper
Permian-
Mesozoic
clastics.
The petroleum potential of the poorly explored Barents Sea is chiefly
connected with a system of deep depressions (Finnmark Trough, South Barents, and
North Novaya Zemlya depressions) that surround from the south and east the
generally uplifted northwestern and northern regions of the shelf.
Triassic-Jurassic clastics are the main target for exploration although upper
Paleozoic carbonates may also be productive. The petroleum potential of the
depressions and expected ratio between oil and gas essentially depend on the
distribution and facies of Lower to Middle
Triassic
source
rocks
. Upper Jurassic
bituminous shales may be mature only locally. The most probable amounts of
undiscovered petroleum resources of the shelf are estimated at 14.2 billion BOE
and 312.2 tcf of gas.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91043©1986 AAPG Annual Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, June 15-18, 1986.