Abstract

Abstract The Central Luconia province in the South China Sea, offshore Sarawak, features extensive development of Middle to Late Miocene isolated carbonate platforms. This study presents a regional seismic architecture – seismic facies review of platform flank geometries and off-platform depositional styles, with the goals of understanding their patterns and exploring the controlling processes. The information on flank steepness and predominant shedding direction is contextualized with respect to extrinsic and intrinsic factors of carbonate platform growth, including tectonics, eustatic sea-level fluctuations, hydrodynamics and regional palaeogeography. Results reveal that flank geometries are consistent throughout the Middle to Late Miocene. In the north of the province eastern flanks are dominantly aggradational, steep and sediment-starved escarpments, whereas western flanks show more progradation and are accretionary in nature. Discrepancies from this pattern are observed among closely spaced platforms. The eastern-aggrading flanks are interpreted to have been highly influenced by monsoonal wind-driven currents. Further south in the province tidal currents, antecedent topography and syn-depositional tectonics were more important controls on platform architectural development. This study of regional processes and geomorphic products provides a basis for enhanced conceptual facies models and reservoir quality predictions.

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