Abstract

The La Baja Guajira Basin is South America's northernmost part that extends from onshore Colombia into the Caribbean Sea and represents an important gas-producing region in Colombia. The dataset used in this study consists of twenty-four (24) regional 2D seismic-reflection lines integrated with information from nine (9) boreholes across the basin. We present seismic interpretations of key stratigraphic and structural features constrained by 1D basin modeling. This allows us to describe the Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the basin, and understand the possible implications for the hydrocarbon potential.We have interpreted eight (8) seismic units within the La Baja Guajira Basin (acoustic basement to U7) affected by three fault groups: 1) NW-SE-striking basement normal faults, 2) inverted normal faults, and 3) strike-slip faults. Considering the evidence, we propose four tectonic phases along the basin's evolution. The basement was affected by normal faulting as the result of extensional tectonics prior to the deposition of the sedimentary infill (Paleogene?). Another extensional interval occurred during the Early Miocene, triggering a moderate accommodation within the proximal area. Subsequently, extension migrated westwards resulting in the formation of the main La Baja Guajira Basin depocenter. In the Middle Miocene (post-extension), sedimentation was controlled by exhumation pulses in adjacent areas to the basin, which resulted in significant sediment input contemporaneous with rapid tectonic subsidence. Yet, local inversion of NW-SE-oriented basement-rooted faults affected today's offshore domain until the Late Miocene. This inversion can be associated with regional compressive deformation linked to the activity of the Oca and Cuiza faults. A second episode of rapid tectonic subsidence happened in the Early Pliocene. In the south of the basin, rocks were subjected to maximum burial and highest temperatures in recent times, conditions that might lead to hydrocarbon generation. The high Neogene to recent sedimentation rates calculated for the La Baja Guajira Basin support microbial gas generation; structural reactivation in this time supported trap formation, particularly in the offshore parts of the basin.

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