Tectonic influences controlling the growth and demise of isolated Oligo-Miocene platforms; East Java Basin, Indonesia
John C. Naranjo
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1215 W Dayton St.,
Madison, WI 53705
A depositional and tectonic model of early (Eocene to
Miocene) evolutionary stages of the East Java Basin is presented from 2-D
reflection seismic interpretation
(~400 lines), well-log synthesis and analysis,
and subsidence profiling. We focus on the prolific growth and sudden demise of
the Kujung limestone that has been dated using Sr isotopes to represent
deposition during 28.2+0.7 - 23.4+0.7 Ma.
The tectonic history of the East Java Basin, which includes
a major portion of the East Java Sea, can be categorized into three major
events: crustal compression from subduction during the Cretaceous, crustal
extension from wrenching of the Philippine Sea and Eurasian plates during the
Paleocene and Eocene, and structural
inversion during the Miocene and Pliocene
from compression of the Sunda orogeny. Tectonic
quiescence during most of the Oligocene- Early Miocene accommodated abundant
shallow-water carbonate reservoir formation throughout Southeast Asia.
Shallow-water carbonates are represented by prolific mound, reef and platform
facies laterally grading into deep-marine off-mound sediments of calcareous
mudstone and chalk. The carbonate growth and stratigraphy of the Kujung
limestone throughout the early stages (Eocene to Late Miocene) of the East Java
Basin appears to have external controls.
Subsidence analyses indicate that carbonate mound growth
during the tectonically quiescent Oligocene- Early Miocene was accommodated by
subsidence rates of 175+65 m/Ma. A much higher rate compared to the
earlier Eocene- Oligocene (60+26 m/Ma; likely due to little overburden of
sediments and no major vertical tectonic activity) and the later Mid- Late
Miocene (79+36 m/Ma; continuation of quiescent period into structural
inversion events).
Interpretation
of onshore 2-D reflection seismic data was
used to create structure contour maps of Eocene-Miocene seismic
stratigraphic
intervals. Predicted tectonic reconstructions of the early stages of the East
Java Basin are modeled and presented in a series of paleogeographic maps.
Outcrop data, rock samples and measured stratigraphic
sections collected at several Late Eocene to Late Miocene exposures in Central
and Western Java, August-September 2006, are to be used as a means of
calibration for the paleogeographic representations in age, stratigraphy and
depositional environment.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90060©2006 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid