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Regional magma plumbing and emplacement mechanisms of the Faroe‐Shetland Sill Complex: implications for magma transport and petroleum systems within sedimentary basins
Authors:Nick Schofield  Simon Holford  John Millett  David Brown  David Jolley  Simon R. Passey  Dave Muirhead  Clayton Grove  Craig Magee  Joanne Murray  Malcolm Hole  Christopher A.‐L. Jackson  Carl Stevenson
Affiliation:1. Geology and Petroleum Geology, School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK;2. Australian School of Petroleum, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia;3. School of Geographical and Earth Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK;4. CASP, Cambridge, UK;5. OMV, London, UK;6. Basins Research Group (BRG), Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College, London, UK;7. Earth Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Abstract:The movement of magma through the shallow crust and the impact of subsurface sill complexes on the hydrocarbon systems of prospective sedimentary basins has long been an area of interest and debate. Based on 3D seismic reflection and well data, we present a regional analysis of the emplacement and magmatic plumbing system of the Palaeogene Faroe‐Shetland Sill Complex (FSSC), which is intruded into the Mesozoic and Cenozoic sequences of the Faroe‐Shetland Basin (FSB). Identification of magma flow directions through detailed seismic interpretation of approximately 100 sills indicates that the main magma input zones into the FSB were controlled primarily by the NE–SW basin structure that compartmentalise the FSB into its constituent sub‐basins. An analysis of well data shows that potentially up to 88% of sills in the FSSC are <40 m in thickness, and thus below the vertical resolution limit of seismic data at depths at which most sills occur. This resolution limitation suggests that caution needs to be exercised when interpreting magmatic systems from seismic data alone, as a large amount of intrusive material could potentially be missed. The interaction of the FSSC with the petroleum systems of the FSB is not well understood. Given the close association between the FSSC and potential petroleum migration routes into some of the oil/gas fields (e.g. Tormore), the role the intrusions may have played in compartmentalisation of basin fill needs to be taken fully into account to further unlock the future petroleum potential of the FSB.
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