Abstract

Abstract Interpretation of seismic reflection profiles tied to well controls allowed assessing the stratigraphic and structural style of the Sulaiman Fold-Thrust Belt (SFTB) including the Zindapir Anticline (ZA) and the adjacent Sulaiman Foredeep. Seismic attributes and facies analysis have shown that in the subsurface of the Sulaiman Foredeep, the presence of shallow marine shelfal deposits is seismically characterized by well-imaged prograding systems of the Paleocene–Eocene age. This same stratigraphic unit also contains packages of divergent reflections fanning towards the west, forming a prominent stratigraphic thickness expansion. The presence of prograding units and the occurrence of stratigraphic thickening are explained with a phase of accelerated subsidence, likely related to an early stage of the SFTB orogeny during the Indian Plate-Afghan Block collision that caused crustal flexure and the formation of an initial foreland basin to the east. Progressive deformation towards the east is evidenced by well-developed, 2–14 km wide, Neogene faulted-detachment folds in the ZA area, that contrast with open folds of the same age observed further to the east, affecting the near surface strata. This recent deformation event may indicate the influence of the Indian-Afghan collisional tectonics during the Oligocene–Miocene. The evolution of the SFTB in this study has significant implications for exploration of new petroleum plays.

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