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Title: The regional distribution of Eocene sediments in Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela

Conference · · AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (USA)
OSTI ID:6676508
 [1]
  1. Lagoven, S.A., Caracas (Venezuela)

The present work is part of a geological study of the Eocene sediments in northern, central, and eastern Lake Maracaibo, with the objectives to establish a coherent sedimentary and structural model and to define exploratory prospects. The Eocene section has accounted for 11.8 billion bbl of the oil produced in the Maracaibo basin. The study area of approximately 2,250 km{sup 2} includes siliciclastic sediment of the Trujillo, Misoa, and Pauji formations, 850-4,900 m thick and bounded by major unconformities of Paleocene and Oligocene-Miocene age. The depositional environments are predominantly deltaic and nearshore shallow marine. Fluvial sediments are restricted to the south and southwest of the area, shelf deposits to the north and east. A major middle Eocene regressive sequence of 150-300 m thickness (informal members B6 to Cl Misoa Formation) is preceded and overlain by smaller regressions within large-scale transgressive stacking patterns. Overall subsidence of the Eocene basin was to the northeast, with listric normal faults striking northwest-southeast, but the distribution of sediments was controlled by north-northeast-striking fault systems of recurring synsedimentary normal displacements and likely strike-slip motions. During the Miocene the basin was inverted with reactivation and reversal of the preexistent growth faults, affecting the final reservoir distribution. The exploratory prospects are related to (1) the presently poorly defined complex structure along the Pueblo Viejo high, (2) basinward extension of the older regressive sequences (informally C4-C7, Misoa Formation) and associated transgressive sands along the Lama-Icotea trend, and (3) traps at deeper levels within the rollover anticlines of listric growth faults. Detailed sequence analysis and further seismic interpretation will aid in locating and delimiting the reservoirs.

OSTI ID:
6676508
Report Number(s):
CONF-900605-; CODEN: AABUD
Journal Information:
AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (USA), Vol. 74:5; Conference: Annual convention and exposition of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, San Francisco, CA (USA), 3-6 Jun 1990; ISSN 0149-1423
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English