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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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United States
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California (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Miocene
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lower Miocene (1)
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Primary terms
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Cenozoic
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Neogene
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lower Miocene (1)
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faults (1)
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tectonics (1)
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United States
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California (1)
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Abstract The US Geological Survey recently assessed the potential for undiscovered conventional petroleum in the Arctic. Using a new map compilation of sedimentary elements, the area north of the Arctic Circle was subdivided into 70 assessment units, 48 of which were quantitatively assessed. The Circum-Arctic Resource Appraisal (CARA) was a geologically based, probabilistic study that relied mainly on burial history analysis and analogue modelling to estimate sizes and numbers of undiscovered oil and gas accumulations. The results of the CARA suggest the Arctic is gas-prone with an estimated 770–2990 trillion cubic feet of undiscovered conventional natural gas, most of which is in Russian territory. On an energy-equivalent basis, the quantity of natural gas is more than three times the quantity of oil and the largest undiscovered gas field is expected to be about 10 times the size of the largest undiscovered oil field. In addition to gas, the gas accumulations may contain an estimated 39 billion barrels of liquids. The South Kara Sea is the most prospective gas assessment unit, but giant gas fields containing more than 6 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas are possible at a 50% chance in 10 assessment units. Sixty per cent of the estimated undiscovered oil resource is in just six assessment units, of which the Alaska Platform, with 31% of the resource, is the most prospective. Overall, the Arctic is estimated to contain between 44 and 157 billion barrels of recoverable oil. Billion barrel oil fields are possible at a 50% chance in seven assessment units. Undiscovered oil resources could be significant to the Arctic nations, but are probably not sufficient to shift the world oil balance away from the Middle East.
Assessment of NE Greenland: prototype for development of Circum-Arctic Resource Appraisal methodology
Abstract Geological features of NE Greenland suggest large petroleum potential, as well as high uncertainty and risk. The area was the prototype for development of methodology used in the US Geological Survey (USGS) Circum-Arctic Resource Appraisal (CARA), and was the first area evaluated. In collaboration with the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS), eight ‘assessment units’ (AU) were defined, six of which were probabilistically assessed. The most prospective areas are offshore in the Danmarkshavn Basin. This study supersedes a previous USGS assessment, from which it differs in several important respects: oil estimates are reduced and natural gas estimates are increased to reflect revised understanding of offshore geology. Despite the reduced estimates, the CARA indicates that NE Greenland may be an important future petroleum province.
REGIONAL CROSS SECTION ACROSS SANTA BARBARA CHANNEL FROM NORTHWESTERN SANTA ROSA ISLAND TO CANADA DE MOLINO
A north-south cross-section across the Santa Barbara Channel between the northwestern end of Santa Rosa Island and the crest of the Santa Ynez Mountains north of Canada de Molino (Plate II) was constructed using previously mapped surface geology, seismic reflection data, and geologic data from exploratory wells and oil and gas accumulations along and near the line of section. It shows Upper Cretaceous through Cenozoic strata dipping toward the Channel from both flanks, gently north from the crest of the Northern Channel Islands anticlinorum on the south, and more steeply southward from the complexly folded and reverse-faulted south flank of the Santa Ynez Mountains on the north.