An article by a group of Chinese geologists in AAPG Bulletin presents a petroleum basin atop a possible MCC.
Basins atop MCCs:
The authors characterize supra-detachment basins as those that form on the hanging wall of low-angel (less than 30 degrees), high displacement (greater than 5 km) normal faults in highly extended terrains.
Case Study:
The authors suggest the Kaiping Sag basin in the rifted margin of northern South China Sea as a supra-detachment basin. It is located at the Pearl River delta, and is reprotedly the first such basin to host oil fields.
This would make Kaiping Sag an interesting case study to understand kinematic relationships between MCC formation and petroleum systems.
Study Design:
The researchers used seismic images, well logs, and geochemical and petrological data on source rocks.
Basin Evolution: The Kaiping Sag basin in relation to the underlying MCC evolved in three stages:
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Deposition of deep-water lacustrine source rocks represented by lower shale units of Wenchang Formation during intense rifting in Early Eocene.
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Formation of MCC via a rolling-hinge structural process which created a domal structure in late Eocene, coeval with deposition of shale and sand in the upper part of Wenchang Formation.
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The MCC altered the original attitude and position of the source rock layers.
Source and Reservoir Rocks:
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Total organic carbon measurements of samples from upper Wenchang Formation range from 0.11 to 0.55 percent and of samples from lower Wenchang Formation range from 0.6 to 2.11 percent.
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High ratios of V/(V+Ni) and low ratios of Th/U measured in the Wenchang samples suggest an anoxic water column.
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Interbedded sand layers in the upper Wenchang Formation and in the overlying Oligocene-age Enping Formation are reservoir rocks.
MCC impact on Source Rocks: The authors discuss three modes how the MCC affected the distribution of source rock layers in the Wenchang Formation:
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Mode I. Source rock disconnected by antithetic faults, mainly observed in the western part of the basin.
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Mode II. Source rock moderately continuous and thick V shaped, mainly in the central part of the basin.
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Mode III. Source rock continuous with original dipping of the basin but relatively thin beds, mainly in the eastern part of the basin.
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In addition, MCC created faults that linked source rocks to structural traps and thus influenced oil migrations pathways.
Go deeper: Read the full article in AAPG Bulletin. Note that the structural and seismic evidence for MCC in Kaiping Sag basin was presented in 2022 by Ye and colleagues in JGR Solid Earth.