Mesozoic Resource Potential in the Southern Permian Basin
CONTAINS OPEN ACCESS

The Southern Permian Basin, as its name suggests, is a historical heartland for hydrocarbon production from the Palaeozoic Rotliegend interval. However, in this mature basin the Mesozoic presents further possibilities to offer resource security to NW Europe. Such opportunities include increasing efficiency in the production of discovered hydrocarbons, exploration for further hydrocarbons (both conventional and unconventional) and efficient exploration for, and production of, geothermal energy. All these potential resources require a grounding in technically sound geoscience, via traditional scientific observation and the application of new technologies, to unlock their value.
The main aim of this volume is to bring together the work of academics and industry workers to consider cross-border geoscience including contributions on Poland, Germany, The Netherlands, the United Kingdom and adjacent areas. The work presented intends to contribute to the development and discovery of further Mesozoic energy resources across the basin.
New insights into salt tectonics in the northern Dutch offshore: a framework for hydrocarbon exploration Available to Purchase
Correspondence: [email protected]
-
Published:January 01, 2018
-
CiteCitation
Matthijs van Winden, Jan de Jager, Bastiaan Jaarsma, Renaud Bouroullec, 2018. "New insights into salt tectonics in the northern Dutch offshore: a framework for hydrocarbon exploration", Mesozoic Resource Potential in the Southern Permian Basin, B. Kilhams, P. A. Kukla, S. Mazur, T. McKie, H. F. Mijnlieff, K. van Ojik
Download citation file:
- Share
Abstract
The northern Dutch offshore is an area that has seen less hydrocarbon exploration activity than other areas of The Netherlands. Acquisition of a new regional 3D seismic dataset allowed further testing and re-evaluation of established geological concepts in this area. It is recognized that the presence and movement of Upper Permian Zechstein evaporites had a major impact on depositional patterns in Mesozoic sediments, structural development and hydrocarbon migration. As such, this study looks specifically at the role of salt tectonics in tectonosedimentary development. To assess this salt tectonic evolution within its structural context, a restoration of the Step Graben and Dutch Central Graben was performed. It follows that depositional patterns are closely linked to the nature of salt structure movement and the timing of regional tectonism. For example, during Late Triassic rifting, salt pillows developed and sedimentation focused away from salt structures into depocentres along regional fault trends. Restoration results show that this interplay between salt movement and tectonism is needed to accommodate the sedimentation patterns associated with the formation of the Step Graben and Central Graben during the Triassic and Jurassic, and later during Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic inversion tectonics.
- Cenozoic
- Central Graben
- chemically precipitated rocks
- Cretaceous
- deposition
- diapirs
- Europe
- evaporites
- faults
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- inversion tectonics
- Jurassic
- Lower Triassic
- Mesozoic
- migration
- models
- Netherlands
- Paleozoic
- Permian
- petroleum
- petroleum exploration
- pillow structure
- reconstruction
- regional
- rifting
- salt
- salt tectonics
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- stratigraphy
- surveys
- tectonics
- tectonostratigraphic units
- three-dimensional models
- Triassic
- uncertainty
- Upper Cretaceous
- Upper Permian
- Upper Triassic
- Western Europe
- Zechstein
- Step Graben