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The document summarizes the West and East Natuna basins. The West Natuna basin formed from early Tertiary rifting and contains over 500 million barrels of oil and 2.5 trillion cubic feet of gas discovered primarily in post-rift sequences. It has potential for additional discoveries in deeper syn-rift reservoirs near source rocks. The East Natuna basin contains the large Natuna D-Alpha gas field of 210 trillion cubic feet found in a carbonate buildup. It is less explored than the West basin but syn-rift clastic plays may have potential given proven source rocks and thick sands.
The document summarizes the West and East Natuna basins. The West Natuna basin formed from early Tertiary rifting and contains over 500 million barrels of oil and 2.5 trillion cubic feet of gas discovered primarily in post-rift sequences. It has potential for additional discoveries in deeper syn-rift reservoirs near source rocks. The East Natuna basin contains the large Natuna D-Alpha gas field of 210 trillion cubic feet found in a carbonate buildup. It is less explored than the West basin but syn-rift clastic plays may have potential given proven source rocks and thick sands.
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The document summarizes the West and East Natuna basins. The West Natuna basin formed from early Tertiary rifting and contains over 500 million barrels of oil and 2.5 trillion cubic feet of gas discovered primarily in post-rift sequences. It has potential for additional discoveries in deeper syn-rift reservoirs near source rocks. The East Natuna basin contains the large Natuna D-Alpha gas field of 210 trillion cubic feet found in a carbonate buildup. It is less explored than the West basin but syn-rift clastic plays may have potential given proven source rocks and thick sands.
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Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Скачайте в формате PDF, TXT или читайте онлайн в Scribd
The West Natuna basin forms the eastern part of the largest basin system within the Sunda shelf, including the Malay basin and the basins in the Gulf of Tailand. The principle tectonic elements include three sub-basinal provinces : NW-SE oriented extension of the Malay basin, NE-SW oriented Anambas graben, eastwest oriented Penyu graben. These sub-basins were initiated as early Tertiary rifts and are separated by major structural highs such as Renggol arch and Cumi-Cumi high that were inverted in the mid-late Miocene. The majority of discoveries have been made in the post-rift to syn-inversion seuences (Gabus/udang to Arang formations). Significant discoveries have also been made in the syn-rift pre-Gabus sequence. To date, approximately 500 MMBO and 2.5 TCFG have been discovered in the basin (Netherwood, 2000). The West Natuna basin is still considered to be prospective with many areas relatively under-explored. There is good potential within the deeper syn-rift sediment package where thick reservoirs are adjacent to generating source rocks and may be sealed by lacustrine and peri-lacustrine shales. Shallow gas in the Muda formation is also a promising new play concept. Awang H. Satyana (2005)
West Natuna Basin
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
Michael and Bond (1997)
West Natuna chronostratigraphy
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
Play concepts for West Natuna basin
Fainstein and Meyer (1998)
West Natuna Block B
Michael and Bond (1997)
West Natuna structural setting
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna geologic sections (1)
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna geologic sections (2)
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna geologic sections (3)
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
Section across West Natuna basin
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna synrift organic facies distribution
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna source kitchen
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna gradient geothermal
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna Lower Gabus paleogeography
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna inversion structure (1)
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna inversion structure (2)
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna oil grouping
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
West Natuna South Kakap play concepts
Pertamina BPPKA (1996)
East Natuna Basin
The basin extends to the east into the Sarawak basin off western Borneo. Unlike the West Natuna basin, it was not subjected to a major phase of Miocene inversion and is, therefore, structurally quite different. The East Natuna basin is divided into a number of discrete structural elements defined by depressions and highs in the Cretaceous granitic and metasediment basements. The Sokang trough in the SW of the basin contains over 6000 m of Tertiary sediments and is separated from the main basin by a structural high called the Paus ridge. To the north of the ridge, is the north-south Komodo graben containing 5000 m of Miocene clastics. The Terumbu shelf in the north has developed between 2500 and 4000 m of neogene cover that includes up to 1500 m of Miocene to Pliocene Terumbu carbonates. Awang H. Satyana (2005)
East Natuna Basin
The East Natuna basin is well known as being the host for the largest gas field in SE Asia, the Natuna D-Alpha gas field, with 210 TCFG in an isolated buildup in the upper part of the thick, middle miocene to late Pliocene Terumbu carbonates. The buildup of the carbonate is over 1500 m, with episodic exposures leading to average porosity of 15 %. The main part of the gas (71 %, dunn et al., 1996) is CO2, reduces the HC gas into 45 TCFG. The East Natuna basin is relatively under-explored but the potential for further large gas discoveries in the Terumbu carbonates is low because most buildups have been drilled. The earlier syn-rift clastic plays, however, require more serious consideration, with proven HC generating capabilities and thick, high-quality sands.
Shallow-marine Sandstone Reservoirs, Depositional Environments, Stratigraphic Characteristics and Facies Model: A Review Numair Ahmed Siddiqui, Abdul Hadi A. Rahman, Chow Weng Sum, Wan Ismail Wan Yusoff and Mohammad Suhaili bin Ismail Department of Geoscience, Faculty of Geoscience and Petroleum Engineering, Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS, Perak, Malaysia