Maranon Basin Summary, Perupetro 2002
Maranon Basin Summary, Perupetro 2002
Maranon Basin Summary, Perupetro 2002
by PARSEP Proyecto de Asistencia para La Reglamentacin del Sector Energtico del Per
TEKNICA
Gary Wine (Project Leader)
PERUPETRO S.A.
Elmer Martnez (Senior Geophysicist/Perupetro Coordinator) Justo Fernandez (Senior Geologist) Ysabel Caldern (Geologist) Carlos Galdos (Geophysicist)
September 2002
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INTRODUCTION
The Maraon Basin Technical Report was conducted approximately over a two-year span by PARSEP, Proyecto de Asistencia para La Reglamentacin del Sector Energtico del Per which is a joint venture between the governments of Peru and Canada. The objective of this study was to reexamine the geological and geophysical data from within the archives of Perupetro and produce a final report on the future hydrocarbon potential of the Maraon Basin. Due to the immense quantity of data and limited time and resources, a decision was made early in the study to handle the well and seismic data in only a digital format so interpretation could be done using computer workstations.
Figure 1: Areas of investigation of the PARSEP Group Huallaga, Santiago and Maraon Basins, and intervening areas. Almost the first year of the project was spent on data collection, quality control and review. LAS files for all new field wildcats were gathered and when not available, well curves were digitized. Standardized composite well logs were made for all from this data set, which were utilized to create a cross-section grid tied to seismic across the Basin. Seismic SEGY data collection and quality control was considerable more problematic. As much of this study was seismic driven, it was difficult to make any forward progress in the project until a reasonable amount of seismic data was loaded on the workstation. Of the more than 50,000 km of data in the Maraon Basin it took at least one year to locate just over 12,000 km of data and get it loaded. Seismic SEGY data collection is an ongoing process and at the time of the this report, over 30,000 km of 2D seismic lines and nine 3D seismic surveys have been loaded for the Maraon Basin. Within the context of this report, however, as there were time constraints, a cutoff date of December 1, 2001 was set after which no new data was be utilized in the interpretation. By this date, 22,723 km (777 lines) from approximately 30 different seismic surveys had been loaded and constitutes the SEGY data set included in this report. It was proposed that any data acquired after that date be utilized in future studies when a much more detailed evaluation of Maraon Basin could be completed. To supplement the work of PARSEP Group, four additional studies were conducted by outside consultants who are considered to be experts in their field. The four studies are all included as Appendices in this report, and were as follows, 1. 2. 3. 4. Geochemical: by Hans Von Der Dick, ChemTerra International Ltd. Tectonics: by Tony Tankard, Tankard Enterprises Hydrodynamics: by Kaush Rakhit, Rakhit Petroleum Consulting Ltd. Magnetic and Gravity: by Erwin Ebner, ELS Consulting
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Maraon Basin Evaluation Interpretation
The Maraon Basin is a large sub-Andean Basin extending north from the Ucayali Basin, through Peru into Ecuador and Colombia where it is know as the Oriente and Putumayo Basins respectively. The Basins evolution begins in the Late Permian to Early Triassic with a major extensional event that dissected the underlying Paleozoic platform and basement rocks into a series of roughly northwestsoutheast grabens and half grabens. In the western extremes, deep rift basins were formed containing sequences of synrift continentally derived sediments that are overlain by a Triassic to Jurassic-aged marine to transitional (sabkha) unit dominated by carbonate deposition and evaporites. This in turn is overlain by regressive continental redbeds of Jurassic age. The eastern Maraon is very different with the remnants of the Late Permian to Early Triassic extensional event being persevered only as a series of half grabens that contain a preserved section of Paleozoic rocks within the lows with early Cretaceous peneplanation stripping off most if not all, of the intervening sediments. In the eastern Maraon the amount of preserved Paleozoic rocks beneath the Cretaceous decreases considerably from south to north to the point where the Cretaceous is seen overlying rocks of only basement affinity as the border with Ecuador is approached. With this difference it is easy to divide the Basin into two distinct regions, the western and eastern Maraon Basin divided by a major hinge zone. This hinge zone is supported with both magnetic and gravity data. It represents the line of flexure separating the stable Maraon platform in the east from the subsiding Basin to the west during the Basins thermal sag phase from Late Triassic to Jurassic (+Cretaceous?) time and the rapidly subsiding Maraon foredeep during Tertiary time. The Maraon Basin started to take on its present-day configuration through a sequence of tectonic events that spans the Tertiary and culminated in the Miocene to near Recent with the highly deforming Quechua orogeny. The present day western margin was formed through a complex combination of wrench related high angle faults, basin inversions and thin-skinned deformation fronts that now separate the Maraon Basin from the Santiago Basin to its northwest and the Huallaga Basin to its southwest. To standardize the Cretaceous stratigraphy of the Maraon Basin, nine regional cross-sections were constructed across the Basin and datumed just above the Chonta Limestone, which is close to the maximum flooding surface during the Cretaceous. When possible, this data was tied to seismic. The data was exported to a database from which a series of maps were generated. These maps were found to support previous interpretations provided in literature on the Basin. When seismic data was integrated into the stratigraphic interpretation, however, several important issues surfaced that were not evident with just well data. 1. The significance of the Maraon Hingeline across which there are major changes in stratigraphy within the Cretaceous 2. The Hingeline fault system was intermittently active through geological time and affects more of the geological column than just the Cretaceous 3. A significant Upper Cretaceous to Early Tertiary WNW-ESE trending wrench related extensional event can be documented in the northwestern Maraon and Santiago Basins that greatly effect the stratigraphy of the Cretaceous section 4. The presence of a Chonta-aged patch reef, which nucleated on the Chonta Limestone. These features significantly affected later depositional patterns in the overlying Chonta and Vivian sections. Geochemical studies in the Basin have recognized two significant petroleum source rocks that have generated the hydrocarbons found in the Cretaceous reservoirs of the Maraon Basin. These are, the Cretaceous Chonta/Raya Formations and the Triassic/Jurassic Pucar Group. A third less known source rock for the Maraon Basin is also present within the Devonian Cabanillas sequence. It, however is confined exclusively to southeastern portion of the Basin. The Chonta and Pucar source rocks in the Basin and neighboring areas are sufficiently rich enough to have generated the commercial amounts of hydrocarbons presently found in the oil fields of the Maraon Basin in addition to a sizeable amount of as of yet, undiscovered reserves. A long-range migration from these source rock kitchen areas to reservoir is implied for the accumulations found to date.
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Three major episodes of HC generation and migration can be documented in the Basin. The first event occurs during Carboniferous/early Permian time with the generation of hydrocarbons from the Devonian Cabanillas and Ordovician Contaya Formations. The survival of this early hydrocarbon generation phase due to tectonics and over-maturity is questionable, however. The second event occurred in late Jurassic time, which triggered Pucar hydrocarbon generation. The third hydrocarbon generation event occurred during Neogene time and affected the Mesozoic and partially the Tertiary sequences. It generated a second pulse of mature oil and gas from the Pucar where Pucar hydrocarbon generation had not terminated. Chonta HC generation and migration, however, is an ongoing process that has continued through to the present. Exploration models in the Maraon Basin for last 20 years have been more or less driven by the same concepts. This is quite evident when one examines literature and reviews the NFW wells drilled in the Basin between 1990 and 2000. The critical criteria for defining Cretaceous exploration targets historically in the Maraon Basin, was the presence of paleo-structures. The logic behind this is sound in that the paleo-structures needed to be in place in the Early Tertiary, to catch the primary and principal pulse of Chonta generated oils. This is a philosophy that has dictated exploration in Maraon Basin for quite some time despite the numerous accumulations with, No paleo-structure Paleo-structures too small to account for the amount of presently trapped oil Present day structures with well developed paleo-structures that are dry or with insignificant oil columns.
With these inconsistencies there are clearly other mechanisms at work. Where oil has been found in younger structures, the explanation is one utilizing the remigration of oil from an older breached or tilted accumulation. This is widely accepted and in this report, one of the most critical aspect for future oil exploration in the Maraon Basin. The shortcomings of the paleo-structure hypothesis are that it misses two very important issues, large-scale paleo-stratigraphic traps and paleo-structures that are no longer closed. As long as traps of both these styles were in place and proximal to the later developing Andean Late Tertiary aged structures, the remigration from these paleo-accumulations into younger aged structures is far from difficult to imagine. Obviously, some of these paleo-traps would be coincidental with the younger structures and others not. The key to exploration in the Maraon Basin is in the definition of paleo-traps, not just structures, and in the remigration route of that hydrocarbon during the Quechua deformation. The other shortcoming concerning past exploration activities in the Maraon Basin has been its focus on Cretaceous reservoirs. In this and a previous PARSEP study in Huallaga Basin and surrounding area, it became evident that carbonates of the Pucar Group represent viable exploration targets in western Maraon Basin. In the south half of the Maraon Basin for example, there are only four penetrations into the Pucar and all are located in the southwestern most corner of the Basin. Of these, three intersected the Pucar in a non-prospective supratidal to continental facies and the one well, Shanusi 1X, which intersected the Pucar in a prospective facies encountered gas bearing porous carbonates. Our current model has the Shanusi 1X well penetrating a high-energy intratidal carbonate along a paleo-high trend created by the late Permian to early Triassic rifting event. This is a potentially productive fairway that may be extrapolated to both the north and south of the well. The remaining significant under-explored section in the Maraon Basin is that of the Paleozoic. Although studied little in this investigation, it is acknowledged that just to the east across the border in Brazil, a similar section is productive and that similar potential may exist in the Maraon Basin of Peru.
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structure hypothesis as previously interpreted, are that it misses two very important issues, large-scale paleo-stratigraphic traps and paleo-structures that are no longer closed. As long as traps of both these styles were in place and proximal to the later developing Andean Late Tertiary aged structures, the remigration from these paleo-accumulations into younger aged structures is far from difficult to imagine. Obviously, some of these paleo-traps would be coincidental with the younger structures and others not. The key to exploration in the Maraon Basin is in the definition of paleo-traps, not just structures, and in the remigration route of that hydrocarbon during the Quechua deformation. Examples are given below. Paleo-Stratigraphic Traps In exploration, its a well-accepted fact that stratigraphic traps are much harder to define than structural traps for obvious reasons. Looking for paleo-stratigraphic traps is even more difficult still. One thing that is presently known, however, is the importance of a stratigraphic trapping component to a number of Maraon producing fields. With this in mind, it is not hard to imagine the presence of large-scale stratigraphic traps and perhaps their dominance over structural traps, in pre-Quechua time when the Basin was structurally much simpler. Despite the difficulty, there is still seismic evidence to suggest that conditions in the Cretaceous during pre-Quechua time would be conducive to the development of stratigraphic traps. It is obviously difficult to ascertain, but one logical explanation for the concentration of oil fields along the Maraon Basin Hingeline is that several large scale stratigraphic accumulations were trapped against the Hingeline due to significant stratigraphic changes from one side to the other. With the hydrocarbon kitchen area being downdip to the west and the pinchout updip to the east, conditions were ideal for such a development. Significant tectonic reorganization during Quechua deformation would have breached some of the paleo-stratigraphic traps while leaving others intact. Oil from breached accumulations would then have remigrated, probably just a short distance into the nearest structure be it Quechua or older in origin, or have been redistributed within the containing sand body reflecting its structurally modified trapping conditions. To further emphasis the importance of the Hingeline and its effect on Cretaceous stratigraphy, one other interval needs to be discussed, the Chonta Limestone. The eastern limit of the Chonta Limestone out of the Basin defined both geologically and geophysically, coincides roughly with the Hingeline area and the Maraon productive trend. Clearly when one examines the evidence, the Hingeline area is one of important stratigraphic changes within the Cretaceous section and one in which numerous stratigraphic traps may have existed. Any breaching of a paleo-stratigraphic accumulation in this area would result in the remigration of hydrocarbons into the nearest trapping geometry, which to some degree may account for the concentration of oil accumulations in this region. Although the above discussion has focused on Chonta generated oils, the same logic can also be applied to Pucar generated oils in the more southern reaches of the Basin. Paleo-Structural Traps Unlike its counterpart in this section, paleo-stratigraphic traps, paleo-structural traps are much easier to identify. Of these, there are two types, 1) paleo-structures with a present day structural component which have been the focus of attention in the Maraon Basin for the last 20 years, and 2) subtle but a really large paleo-structures that no longer have closure. In a Pozo to Base Cretaceous isopach (Figure 2) of this the area, there is no apparent significant, coincidental paleo-structure associated with these wells. It should be noted that Pastococha, does, however have a minor paleo-drape component, as it sits over a pre-Mitu, rifted horst block but it is beyond the resolution of the contour interval of the map. What is significant, however, is the sizable paleo-structure north of the Pastococha well, which is also very evident on the flattened (Pozo) seismic section shown in Figure 3, at Base Cretaceous and younger levels. Present day structure, a result of later Quechua deformation, over this location is non-existent as shown in Figure 4. Based on the above analysis, it is speculated that the paleo-structure defined north of the Pastococha well once reservoired a large accumulation. With Quechua downwarping, this oil then migrated updip into other structures that were forming contemporaneously with this deformation. Structures such as Yanayacu and Samiria Sur were filled as a result of oil remigration from this ancestral accumulation.
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This being the case, other proximal structures such as the ones defined in this study as the Nutria Prospect (figure 10) and Majaz (Figure13) would have to be considered as being favorably located to receive a charge of remigrated oil in late Tertiary time.
32X
Figure 2: Pozo to Base Cretaceous Isochron showing the presence of a large paleo-structure just north of the Pastococha well. The seismic line highlighted is shown in Figures 3 and 4
Figure 3: Seismic Line PHI10 flattened on the Pozo showing the presence of a sizable paleo-structure that existed in the Pastococha/Samiria area in early Tertiary time
Figure 4: Present day time section of Seismic Line PHI10 showing how the high as mapped in Figure 2, has disappeared.
Conclusions From the examples discussed above, it becomes evident prospective structures do not necessarily have to have an ancestral component. By focusing on prospects with a young, Quechua-aged structural evolution that were in a favorable position to receive a charge of remigrating oil from breached paleostratigraphic and structural traps may open up new areas of exploration in the Maraon Basin.
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Hydrodynamic Study
Through the hydrodynamic study sponsored by PARSEP, it was possible to identify areas where hydrodynamic tilting occurs. Tilts are expected to be very severe in the western Maraon Basin where high hydrologic heads can be mapped within the Cretaceous section, near the highly elevated recharge areas in the fold and thrust belt of the western Basin margin. The effect diminishes to the east and southeast across the Basin and the measured data fits closely with what is observed in the fields. Tilted oil/water contacts have only been found in the productive area of the northern Maraon Basin (Block 1AB Area) and not in the southern production area (Block 8 Area). Hydrodynamics are clearly an important component to understanding the dynamics of the petroleum systems operative in the Basin.
The two seismic lines in yellow are displayed in Enclosure 30a CONTOR INTERVAL = 100ms
AH - 266 AH - 256
Figure 6: 3D display of the Picuro This Map was generated from the one displayed in Figure 2 Figure 5: TWT Top Vivian Map showing the Picuro Prospect
The Pucar group of prospects consists of a series of northwest to southeast linear aligned closed structural highs of which the largest is 34 km2. The seismic line displayed in Figure 7 shows the Pucar structure to be cored by an east verging reverse fault that terminates at the base of the Sarayaquillo
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above which there is no structural closure. Overlying and sealing any possible Pucar accumulation is the postulated regional sabhka evaporitic facies which is in confomable contact with the Pucar intratidal facies that represents the potential reservoir unit. Unlike siliciclastic reservoirs carbonates are not as susceptible to porosity occlusion due to burial diagenesis.
Contour Interval = 50 ms Closures from N to S (Colored Yellow) D = 2.8 km2 C = 34.3 km2 B = 8.8 km2 A = 5.0 km2
AH 73-1
Figure 8: Seismic Line AH73-1 (Figure 7) through the east verging fault trend that creates the series of closures at Pucar level, colored yellow in Figure 7
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b)The Pastococha/Samiria Area is located in the southern Maraon Basin (Figure 9) south of the Yanayacu Oil Field which is currently producing from the Vivian Formation, and to the west of the Bretaa Discovery, which tested 807 bopd of 18o API gravity oil, also from the Vivian Formation. A block with the configuration as shown in Figure 9 is being recommended to Perupetro to put out for tender.
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Seismic lines utilized in the Pastococha evaluation Seismic lines available in SEGY for mat ( all blue lines, thick and thin) Seismic lines available on paper (not utilized in Maraon Basin Evaluation) Pipeline
The Nutria Prospect is the northernmost structural culmination along the Samiria Fault (Figure 10), northwest of the Samiria Sur 1X oil discovery made on the southern culmination. With the data at hand, it appears that the Samiria 1X well was drilled off structure on the NW-SE seismic line PHI-29 and the actual closure, the Nutria Prospect, PHI-13, remains untested. Figure 10: TWT Structure Map on the Pozo. Note the structural elevation of the Nutria structure relative to the one tested by the Samiria Sur 1X well. Highlighted seismic line displayed in Figure 12 C.I = 20ms
Nutria Prospect
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Figure 11: 3D TWT map on the Base Cretaceous, with cross sections AA and BB of wells (Pozo to Base Cretaceous in depth) projected onto the surface. Note the off-structure locations of the Samiria 1X and possibly the Viracocha 1X wells
Figure 12: composite seismic line (located on Figure 10) through the Nutria Prospect, the Samiria 1X well and the Samiria Sur 1X wells. c) The Majaz Prospect located just to the northwest of the productive Yanayacu oil field, is a prospect that fell out while doing an analysis on the Diana Mae 1X well. For the PARSEP evaluation only the newer Great Western seismic lines were used due to the serious misties seen in the Prakla (PK) data set of which PK8-54 is an example (Figure 13). This critical line ties nothing and there is a belief that it may be reversed as well as poorly located in manner similar to several other PK lines we have encountered. The problem with the Diana Mae location is two fold. The first is in the subtlety of the structure, which has a maximum of 8 ms of closure on the top of the Vivian along a well-defined southwest, plunging structural nose. The saddle defining the counter regional dip to close the Diana Mae structure is poorly defined and additional seismic may show this closure to be even less than currently mapped. There is no faulting associated with the Diana Mae structure (Figure 11 to13).
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Downdip from the Majaz Prospect the Cuinico S 1X Well Tested oil - 18.8 API from a Chonta Sandstone Interval
Figure 13: The maximum size of the structure when mapped on the top of the Vivian if closed at the 2655ms level as indicated above, is approximately 100 km2
Figure 14: West to east seismic line GW95-Q4 across the Majaz structure
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Figure 15: Shanusi area time-structure map on top of Pucar. The Shanusi 1X well tested gas on a small satellite structure that opens up to a much larger feature to its SE.
Yurimaguas Structure
Approximately 25 km north of the Shanusi well is the huge Yurimaguas structure, which was drilled by Texaco in the 50s. The well was TDd in the Cushabatay after encountering all the Cretaceous reservoirs to be fresh water wet. The Pucar Group on this structure remains untested. As this structure appears to be on trend with the postulated Pucar reservoir fairway, it remains as an attractive prospect. On a somewhat speculative note, one might hypothesis that oil once reservoired in the Shanusi structure was displaced further updip into the Yurimaguas structure by a late gas charge.
Cuinico Sur 1X
-3926 -3182
Maranon 1X
-3376
Viracocha 1X Samiria 1X
-3100 -3069
Samiria
-305
Loreto 1X
-897
Shanusi 1X
-1297
La F Santa Lucia 1X
Figure 16: Subsea structural map on Top Vivian showing the relative structural relationship of the Yurimaguas well to that of the Shanusi 1X well. Highlighted area is potential reservoir fairway trend of the Pucar identified in the Shanusi well
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CONCLUSIONS
Exploration in the Maraon Basin has been focusing primarily on one type of trap for the last 20 years and consequently the well sampling has become somewhat biased in recent years not necessarily reflecting the true potential of the Basin. With the attention in the Basin on structures with ancestral growth, drilling targets have progressively gotten smaller as the most of the obvious targets within the production fairways have been drilled. To enhance this progressively dwindling supply of drillable structures, companies have moved to depth conversions to add closure to structures that have little to no closure in time introducing another variable into the risk. As a result exploration success along with size of the remaining structures has diminished as well. This velocity variable (issue) is obviously much less important in the more robust structures that were drilled early in the exploration of the Maraon Basin, which could survive a rigorous velocity analysis and conversion to depth. In other words, a 5 ms (or its depth equivalent) change one way or the other will not have much of an impact whether a well gets drilled or not. It has long been accepted that there has been remigration of hydrocarbons in the Basin that was initiated by the Quechua deformation. Block 64 in the northeast Maraon and the fields of the southern Maraon Basin are such examples. It is nave to believe that in the past, that only structures, and structures that remained intact after Quechua deformation are the only traps that could have harbored any significant hydrocarbon accumulation. We believe the importance of remigrated hydrocarbons their migration route during the Quechua deformation has greatly been underestimated and significant reserves remain to be found proximal to areas were large stratigraphic accumulations once resided. The same holds true for closed broad gentle structural features that lost closure due to the effects of the Quechua deformation. Exploration in the Maraon Basin must in the future consider the above as well as new reservoirs in the Chonta Limestone (patch reefs), Pucar and the Paleozoic sections, which this study has attempted to emphasis the importance of. The effects of hydrodynamics are also a component in understanding the hydrocarbon potential of the Basin as indicated through the study sponsored by PARSEP. Finally, an issue as mundane as data verification/qualification may also lead to prospects in a Basin where the seismic data can be fraught with navigational errors. Whether the prospects defined by this study by questioning the data, will hold up under further scrutiny, remains to be seen. It is a starting point, however, for future evaluations. Upon the completion of this report, it was only to obvious to all involved that to fully understand the idiosyncrasies of the Basin, a detailed examination must be conducted utilizing all available seismic, 2D and 3D, and development wells, but only after an effort to clean up the navigational problems of the seismic data is completed. As the results of this study, PARSEP is leaving a tied data set comprising of almost 23,000 km of 2D seismic lines, over 100 composite LAS files of all exploratory wells, and an Access Database upon which future studies can expand.
SELECTED REFERENCES
NOTE: As an attachment to this report is an Excel spreadsheet of the data pertinent to this study area in the PERUPETRO archives which is included on the CD accompanying this report as Appendix 11 Perupetro Maraon Basin Archived Files Advantage Resources (2001) Field Geologic Work - Block 87. Anadarko Petroleum (1995) Maraon Basin, Peru- Pre-Cretaceous Evaluation. Perupetro Technical Archive Arco 1996 Geological and Geophysical Evaluation, Block 64 (Arco), Maraon Basin. Appendix 1 to 6. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP20446-20449. Beicip Franlab (1996) Petroleum Exploration Playtypes Of Sub Andean Basins - Volume 1 Y 2(ARPEL). ITP20403, ITP 20404
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Coastal (1998) Final Report of The Exploratory Campaign, Blocks: 73 (A, B, C And M) And 74. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP21624. Core Laboratories (1996) Hydrocarbon Source Rocks of the Sub-Andean Basins, Peru. Volumes I, II and III. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP20000-20004. CTI ChemTerra Int. Consultants (2000) Oil Generation in Sub-Andean Basins in Peru. Report for PARSEP, Perupetro S.A. and Canadian Petroleum Institute. Perupetro Technical Archive. Enterprise Oil (1997) Hydrocarbon Potential of Paleozoic Rocks in The Block 65M. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP20543. Fernndez C., J., Caldern C., Y. (2001) Reconocimiento Geolgico Olmos-Pongo de Rentema-Bagua-Moyobamba-Tarapoto-Chazuta. PARSEP internal report. 30 p. Mathalone, J. & Montoya, M. (1995) The Petroleum Geology of the Peruvian Sub Andean Basins. In: A. Tankard, R. Surez and H.J. Welsink, Petroleum Basins of South America: Memoir 62, p. 423-444. Mobil Exploration (1992) Levantamiento Geolgico Anticlinal Lamas y Resumidero de Petrleo del Ro Shanusi. Mobil Exploration and Producing Peru, Perupetro Technical Archive IT05419.Inc. Occidental Petroleum (1996a) Estudio Geolgico Regional de la Cuenca Maran, Exploracin en el Lote 1AB (Oxy). Texto y Anexos I a III. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP20399, ITP20400-20402 Occidental Petroleum (1998a) Final Geologic Report - Field Work 1997, Block 72 - Northern Area (Oxy) - Appendixes I and II. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP20677-20678, ITP20684-20685. Occidental Petroleum (1998b) Reporte Final de Evaluacin Geolgico - Geofsica, Lote 72 (Oxy). Adjuntos A y B. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP20687-20689. PARSEP Study (2001) Interim Report on the Santiago Basin. Perupetro Technical Archive. PARSEP Study (2002) Petroleum Potential of the Huallaga Basin and Adjacent Area. Perupetro Technical Archive ITP21257, 21258. Pluspetrol/Oxy (1997) Informe Final del Primer Periodo Exploratorio, Lote 54 (Pluspetrol-Oxy) - Volmenes 1 y 2. Perupetro Technical Archive Robertson Research. Petroleos Del Per (1990) Informe Final. Evaluacin Geolgica-Geofsica por Hidrocarburos. Selva Peruana. Lotes 8,31 y 35.Volmenes 1-4 y Apndices A-D. Perupetro Technical Archive IT03950-03958 y IT03961-03967. Tankard, Anthony (2001) Tectonic Framework of Basin Evolution in Peru. Report for PARSEP, Perupetro S.A. and Canadian Petroleum Institute, 23 p. Perupetro Technical Archive. Vail, P.R., Hardenbol, J. & Todd, R.G. (1984) Jurassic Unconformities, Chronostratigraphy and Sea-level Changes from Seismic Stratigraphy and Biostratigraphy. In: Schlee, J.S. (ed.) Interregional Unconformities and Hydrocarbon Accumulation. AAPG Memoir, 36, p.129-144.
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Wildcat Well Files, Maraon Basin and Adjacent Areas. From Perupetro Technical Archive.