Hydrocarbon Play
Types in the Tertiary Rocks of the Magallanes
Basin,
Chile, Revealed by Seismic Stratigraphy
Pigott, John D.1, Sara Elgueta2
(1)
University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK (2) Sipetrol S. A,
Santiago,
Chile
The Magallanes Basin of Southern Chile
is a polyhistory basin with three distinct episodes
of geomechanical strain responses to tectonic stress:
1. An elastic pre-Cretaceous rifting stage, 2. A flexed downwarping
and upwarping Turonian
stage, and 3. A Tertiary viscoelastic response to
loading and unloading. These three geomechanical
episodes have resulted in the evolution of a variety of possible petroleum
systems with vertical, lateral, and mixed vertical-lateral migration pathways.
Though the Chilean-Argentine Mesozoic petroleum systems of the basin are still
productive, most of the
Magallanes
Tertiary
Foreland
Basin remains unexplored. However, regional
seismic stratigraphy integrated with borehole data
and basin modeling of this largely frontier basin reveals seven distinct
hydrocarbon play types for the Tertiary rocks:
1. Paleocene TST
(“Zona Glauconítica”)
on-lapping sands on an
Eastern Turonian ramp of principally horizontal migration
pathways. 2. Offlapping Oligo-Miocene
LST deltas proximal to deep faults for secondary lateral migration with viscoelastic deformation from original vertical elastic
fault conduits from deeper strata. 3. Structurally rotated Oligo-Miocene
deltas with secondary migration. 4. Basin floor fan channel sands with
hydrocarbons feeding updip from viscoelastic
deformation and basin floor fan feeder channels. 5. Sub decollement
folded and faulted Eocene basin floor sands of secondary migration. 6.
Paleocene incised LST valleys filled by ensuing TST shales
and sands of Lower Eocene upon a Turonian ramp with
lateral migration upon a viscoelastic flexed basement
flank. 7. Miocene HST fluvial and estuarine channels associated with
alluvial/estuarine complexes with vertical migration from deeper Cretaceous
strata (eastern margin).