Abstract

The Recôncavo Basin is the third major natural gas producer in Brazil. Lower Cretaceous sandstones of the Maracangalha Formation (Caruaçu and Pitanga Members) hold the largest volumes of non-associated gas in this basin. However, these reservoirs are extremely complex due to a range of soft-sediment deformational process that modify the depositional architecture and impact on the original structure of the porous system. The cause of soft-sediment deformation is still contradictory because both mass movements and post-depositional fluidization has been proposed by previous studies. This uncertainty has drastic implications for reservoir predictability in the subsurface since mass-transport deposits and fluidization-remobilization complexes have very different architectures. To test these hypotheses, this study examines soft-sediment deformation structures (SSDS) in outcrop and core in order to interpret remobilization processes and to infer the main trigger mechanisms involved. Outcrop description was carried out in the coastal zone of the Todos os Santos Bay, NE Brazil, where the Maracangalha Formation is very well exposed. High-resolution core images from four producing fields located northward (Miranga, Jacuípe, Lamarão and Massapê) were also described. SSDS include a great variety of structures: 1) dish, 2) pillar, 3) consolidation lamination, 4) load structures, 5) tilted, convoluted, distorted and disrupted laminations, 6) flames, ball and pillow structures and pseudonodules, 7) large-scale mounded geometries, 8) penecontemporaneous faults and 9) sandstone intrusions/extrusions (dikes, sills, breccias and volcanoes). Intensely deformed sandstones are connected to sandstone intrusions that cut through finer-grained, low-permeability strata. Orientation of normal faults and sandstone intrusions suggests that they are genetically related. The Pitanga and Caruaçu Members are better described as facies, since they differ only by the degree of deformation. Pitanga facies is the product of remobilization of an undeformed (Caruaçu) facies. Unlike previous interpretations that indicated the action of slumps, we concluded that the upward movement of interstitial fluids (liquefaction and fluidization) was the main mechanism of remobilization, deformation and mixing of sediments. The overpressure of pore fluids and syn-rift faults propagation broke up seal-strata, releasing the fluids pressure and driving the upward movement of sediments. Key architectural elements of a sand complex are recognized in outcrop and core, including parent units, host-strata and sandstone intrusions. For the origin of this injectite complex we suggest a seismic trigger related to extensional tectonics of the rift system. The Maracangalha injectite complex comprises a new hydrocarbon play to be considered in further exploration and production (E&P) activities in the Recôncavo Basin.

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