Abstract

The Ceará Basin, located in the Brazilian Equatorial Margin, represents an exploratory frontier situated in a complex structural framework. The basin observed a dynamic interplay of extensional, transtensional, and transpressional regimes, registered by several sedimentary intervals and unconformities poorly documented by wells, especially at the deeper portions. In this study, based on 3D seismic and well data from the Mundaú Sub-Basin, we interpreted the main seismic sequences of the drift phase to build a Relative Geological Time (RGT) model, based on a semi-automatic seismic traces correlation matched with the well top formations. A seismic attribute analysis from key seismic surfaces extracted from the RGT, highlights the main sediment dispersal routes revealing a significant change after the Mid-Eocene, once sedimentation overpassed a topographic barrier created by fault reactivations, in a transpressional regime, associated with the Romanche Fracture Zone. The integration of seismic and well data affords a deeper understanding of basin dynamics, revealing how sedimentary processes respond to shifts in tectonic stress in this portion of the basin.

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