The Role of
Active Structural Growth in Controlling Deep-Water Reservoir Systems and
Petroleum Prospectivity in the Confined Gulf of Lyons Basin, Western
Mediterranean
Ianev, Roman S.1,
Nathalie Bordas-Le Floch1, John R.
Underhill2, Richard J.W. Bunt1 (1) Melrose Resources plc,
Edinburgh, United Kingdom (2) School of Geosciences, The
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
The interpretation of a newly acquired
regional 2-D seismic survey and its integration with onshore field exposures in
neighbouring parts of Southern Europe has led to renewed
exploration interest in Neogene (Mio-Pliocene)
deep-water reservoir plays in the confined Gulf of Lyons Basin in the Western Mediterranean. It can now be shown
that the basin originated in the Oligocene as a syn-sedimentary
extensional back-arc system that included the analogous Sarcidano
Basin of Sardinia. Subsequent Miocene-Recent post-rift subsidence was allied to
increasing sediment supply due to increased run off from the developing Alpine
and Pyreneean mountain belts. As a result the basin
became increasingly dominated by turbiditic
deposition as part of an upward-shoaling succession during the Miocene. The
basin fill subsequently records a dramatic shallowing
episode during the Late Miocene (Messinian) in
response to dessication of the Mediterranean Sea with the development of
deeply-incised canyons in proximal areas and thick evaporite
deposits in the offshore. Post-rift sedimentation resumed on the margin
following Pliocene transgression. Burial and tilting triggered decollement on the mobile Messinian
evaporates and down-slope movement of the Plio-Quaternary
sediments with the formation of a spectacular linked extensional-translation-compressional system of normal faults and folds with
concomitant effects on sedimentation. Interpretation of seismic facies demonstrates how active structural growth of the
mobile evaporite system controlled sediment dispersal
patterns and petroleum prospectivity in the sub-salt
and supra-salt turbidites. Furthermore, basin
subsidence and modelling of the source rock
maturation histories has provided a testable model of the newly identified play
opportunities.