The Response of Miocene Shelf-Deltaic Systems to the Propagation of the Sakhalin Strike-Slip Zone
By
M. Brettle, S. Flint (University of Liverpool, U.K.), and J. Bessa (Sakhalin Energy)
Ascertaining the timing and extent of tectonic
deformation is a major uncertainty when assessing the relationship between
strike-slip tectonics and accommodation history. This is particularly true for
the offshore Eastern area of Sakhalin; where strike-slip deformation was
concomitant with the formation of the Miocene-Amur delta system that prograded
orthogonal to the main strike-slip trend. Two distinct phases of strike-slip
deformation affected Sakhalin; an early phase
initiated south of Sakhalin during
the Oligocene and a later
phase
propagated through the island during the
Miocene. The Miocene
phase
rotated and uplifted blocks within the strike-slip
zone, causing the progressive emergence of Sakhalin. In this zone, palaeo-Amur
transportation/dispersal pathways were modified in response to the formation of
strike-slip generated topography, whereas areas marginal to the strike-slip zone
were less influenced by strike-slip tectonics. These areas marginal to the
strike-slip system comprise deltaic-shelfal deposits that are currently the
focus of offshore exploration and field development on the East Sakhalin shelf.
This paper presents a tectono-stratigraphic synthesis of the East Sakhalin
shelf, and contrasts the tectonic elements, basin-fill geometries and
stratigraphy of offshore and onshore areas.We show that in order to assess the
effect of modulations in accommodation and sediment supply on the East Sakhalin
Shelf it is essential to ascertain the combined effects of changes to the
palaeo-Amur, shelf-depositional systems and the tectonic regime.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.