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GEOREF RECORD

Structural evolution of the T-Block Brae Fields, South Viking Graben

Simon Allerton, Eugenio Giuliani, Amy Kwiatkowski, Mark Jones, Julian Robinson and Adam Styles
Structural evolution of the T-Block Brae Fields, South Viking Graben (in Rift-related coarse-grained submarine fan reservoirs; the Brae Play, South Viking Graben, North Sea, Colin C. Turner (editor) and Bryan T. Cronin (editor))
AAPG Memoir (January 2018) 115: 543-564

Abstract

The structural evolution of the T-Block (U.K. 16/17) Brae Formation fields in the southern part of the South Viking Graben reflects a history of Late Jurassic rifting and Early Cretaceous inversion. Triassic rifting follows an inherited Caledonian trend, with Permian and Triassic depocenters to the northwest and southeast of a ridge trending north-northeast through the South Viking Graben from the area of the Thelma field. In the northern part of the area, in Trees Block (U.K. 16/12), halokinesis has created accommodation space for Middle Jurassic deposition. Further south, in T-Block, Middle Jurassic deposition does not appear to have been influenced by Caledonide structures. Rifting commenced in Trees Block in the early part of the Late Jurassic, with development of a north-south striking northern fault segment. The faulting propagated southward from the northern segment and northward from a segment to the south of T-Block, to create a relay zone opposite Thelma and Toni. At the segment centers, the fault throws are large, and the Middle Jurassic sequence dips to the west, toward the footwall. In comparison, at the Thelma relay zone, the fault displacements are much smaller, and the Middle Jurassic dips to the east. Flexural uplift and back-tilting have affected the footwall sediments and normal faults. The fault segment evolution is likely to have been a significant control on Brae sedimentation, the back-tilting of the footwalls at the segment centers funneling sediment supply into the Thelma relay zone, and footwall uplift providing emergent source areas adjacent to the developing graben. The basin morphology has been modified by postrifting thermal subsidence, increasing the eastward dip of the fault terraces. Inversion in the Early Cretaceous caused uplift of the hanging wall, creating a bulge over Thelma and Toni, and uplift on the fault adjacent to Trees Block. This inversion event is likely to be the result of oblique northwesterly compression, causing shortening and left-lateral strike-slip on the marginal faults. This event can be related to an unconformity between the Valhall and the Carrack formations, which constrains timing to the late Barremian-Aptian.


ISSN: 0271-8529
Coden: MAPGAN
Serial Title: AAPG Memoir
Serial Volume: 115
Title: Structural evolution of the T-Block Brae Fields, South Viking Graben
Title: Rift-related coarse-grained submarine fan reservoirs; the Brae Play, South Viking Graben, North Sea
Author(s): Allerton, SimonGiuliani, EugenioKwiatkowski, AmyJones, MarkRobinson, JulianStyles, Adam
Author(s): Turner, Colin C.editor
Author(s): Cronin, Bryan T.editor
Affiliation: CNR International, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Affiliation: Marthon International Oil, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Pages: 543-564
Published: 20180101
Text Language: English
Publisher: American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
ISBN: 9781629812816
References: 27
Accession Number: 2021-047481
Categories: Structural geologyEconomic geology, geology of energy sources
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sects., sketch maps
N58°17'60" - N58°36'00", E01°11'60" - E01°23'60"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2021, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 202115

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