Sedimentary and reservoir characteristics of Late Pliocene deep-water depositional units in Rakhine Basin in the Bay of Bengal

Significance In recent years, notable discoveries in deep-water oil and gas exploration have emerged in the Rakhine Basin, located in the northern Bay of Bengal. Methods In this study, high-resolution 3D seismic data from the Rakhine Basin were used to identify deep-water sedimentary architectural e...

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Published in地质科技通报 Vol. 43; no. 6; pp. 244 - 257
Main Authors Jianan WU, Hui WEI, Guozhang FAN, Junmin JIA, Hongxia MA, Liangbo DING, Xiaoyong XU, Hongping WANG, Ying ZHANG, Xingjia YIN, Hui CHEN, Ming SU, Ce WANG, Haiteng ZHUO
Format Journal Article
LanguageChinese
Published Editorial Department of Bulletin of Geological Science and Technology 01.11.2024
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ISSN2096-8523
DOI10.19509/j.cnki.dzkq.tb20230577

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Summary:Significance In recent years, notable discoveries in deep-water oil and gas exploration have emerged in the Rakhine Basin, located in the northern Bay of Bengal. Methods In this study, high-resolution 3D seismic data from the Rakhine Basin were used to identify deep-water sedimentary architectural elements, including channels, levees, lobate fans (such as crevasse-splay lobes and distributary channel-lobe complexes), hemipelagic mud, and mass-transport deposits. Alongside drilling logs and sampling results, the reservoir characteristics and exploration potential of channels, levees, and lobes in the wells were further analyzed, and the reservoir hierarchy and spatial distribution were determined. Results Notably, the Rakhine Basin is characterized by relatively shallow burial depths, weak compaction, and minimal diagnostic alteration since the Pliocene, positioning channels, levees, and lobate fansas potential exploration targets for shallow biogenic gas. In particular, meandering stacked channels emerge as a
ISSN:2096-8523
DOI:10.19509/j.cnki.dzkq.tb20230577