Geology of Indonesia at Glance
Geology of Indonesia at Glance
Geology of Indonesia at Glance
WESTERN INDONESIA
Sumatra
Natuna
Java
Java Sea
Kalimantan
CENTRAL INDONESIA
Makassar Strait
Sulawesi
The lesser Sunda Islands
Halmahera
EASTERN INDONESIA
Papua
Banda Arc
Aru Sea
Timor Island
Timor Sea
Indonesia is the largest archipelagic state in the world comprising five major islands and
about 300 smaller island groups. Altogether there are 13,667 islands and islets of which about
6,000 inhabited. The archipelago is situated on a crossroad between two oceans, the Pacific
and Indian oceans, and bridges two continents, the Asian and Australian. Indonesia has a total
area of 9,8 million sq km, of which more than 7,9 million sq km under water.
Physiographically, the islands of Sumatra, Java and Kalimantan are attached to the Sunda
Shelf of the Asian continent. On this landmass the water depth does not exceed 200 meters.
To the east, Irian Jaya and the Aru islands lie on the Sahul Shelf, which are parts of the
Australian continent. Located between these two shelfal is the island grop of Nusa Tenggara,
Sulawesi, Maluku and Halmahera. These islands are encircled by deep seas which in many
places reach 5,000 meters. About 60 Tertiary sedimentary basins, spread out from Sumatra in
the west to Irian Jaya in the east, are identified in Indonesia. So far only 38 basins have been
explored and drilled for petroleum and 14 of the are now producing oil and gas. Seventy three
percent of these basins are located offshore, about one third of them in the deeper sea, with
water depth exceeding 200 m.
2000
PROVINCE GEOLOGY
The province covers an area of approximately 117,000 km2 primarily onshore Sumatra, Indonesia (Fig. 1). Exploration efforts
have been concentrated onshore with only a few dry holes drilled in offshore areas (Petroconsultants, 1996). The Palembang or
Lampung High or arch separates the South Sumatra basin from the Sunda Basin of the Northwest Java Province 3824 (Fig. 2).
This high served both as a barrier to sediment dispersal and as a sediment source terrain from Mesozoic through most of the
Tertiary (de Coster, 1974). The South and Central Sumatra Basin Provinces (3828, 3808) are divided at the Tigapuluh Mountains
(Fig. 2). The western margin is the Plio-Pleistocene Barisan Mountains (Fig. 2). South Sumatra is divided into sub-basins: Jambi,
North Palembang, Central Palembang, South Palembang, and Bandar Jaya Basin (Fig. 2) (Williams and others, 1995; Suseno and
others, 1992). Most of the published data is from the South Palembang sub-basin.
Tectonics
In the center of the South Sumatra Basin Province, are Permian to Carboniferous metamorphic and igneous rocks crop out in a
northwest to southeast trend. These consist of phyllites, slates, argillites, quartzites, gneisses and granites (Adiwidjaja and de
Coster, 1973). In the northwest, and south of the Permo-Carboniferous trend, are areas of Mesozoic metamorphic rocks with local
granite intrusions (Adiwidjaja and de Coster, 1973). In a broad trend south of the Permo-Carboniferous and Mesozoic rocks are
Mesozoic metasediments and limestones, which have been dated as Jurassic or Cretaceous, together with mafic igneous rocks
(Adiwidjaja and de Coster, 1973). To the north of the Permo-Carboniferous trend near the city of Palembang, is a northwest to
southeast trending area described as micritic limestone of Cretaceous age (Adiwidjaja and de Coster, 1973).
The South Sumatra basin was formed by three major tectonic phases: 1) extension during late Paleocene to early Miocene forming
north-trending grabens that were filled with Eocene to early Miocene deposits; 2) relative quiescence with late normal faulting
from early Miocene to early Pliocene; and 3) basement-involved compression, basin inversion, and reversal of normal faults in the
Pliocene to Recent forming the anticlines that are the major traps in the area (Suhendan, 1984). Many of the normal faults that
formed the depositional basins in South Sumatra have been reactivated and some have been reversed during Miocene to Plio-
Pleistocene compression and basin inversion (Sudarmono and others, 1997; Zeliff and others, 1985; Moulds, 1989). The emergent
Sunda Shelf plate (platform, craton, or Malay micro-plate now mostly beneath the Java Sea) was confined on the east by oceanic
crust and spreading centers, to the west by continental crust and to the south by Cretaceous oceanic and continental crust
(Pulunggono, 1985; Ponto and others, 1988). Sundaland, or the Sunda Shelf Plate, is considered to be composed of a mosaic of
continental and oceanic microplates accreted and sutured together in the Late Triassic (Pulunggono, 1985; Cole and Crittenden,
1997). Since the early Tertiary, the Sunda Shelf plate has generally tilted southward and has been subsiding (Ponto and others,
1988). The current subduction system, located offshore west of Sumatra and south of Java, began in the late Oligocene. Uplift of
the Barisan Mountains, resulting from the subduction, began in late Miocene but primarily occurred in the Plio-Pleistocene
(Hamilton, 1979; Sudarmono and others, 1997). In the Eocene to Oligocene, tectonic stress and extension, resulting from
northward movement of both the Australian tectonic plate to the east and the India plate to the west, and rotation of Borneo,
formed rifts or half-graben complexes along much of the southern margin of the Sunda Shelf plate (now Sumatra and Northwest
Java) (Hall, 1997a, b; Longley, 1997; Sudarmono and others, 1997). These rift basins overlie an unconformity formed on a variety
of pre-Tertiary rocks.
The grabens and major faults of the South Sumatra Basin Province are oriented north-northwest to south-southeast. This is a
similar alignment to the grabens of Central Sumatra but they are deeper and larger basins (Fig. 3). The Palembang Basin in South
Sumatra is greater than 4,500 m deep (Hutchinson, 1996). The fault-bounded Benakat Gulley connects the major basin complexes
of the Lematang Depression and the Palembang Depression (Fig. 2) (Hutchinson, 1996; Moulds, 1989). The north—south Benakat
Gulley is similar in trend to the Bengkalis depression in Central Sumatra, the fault zone that forms the eastern coast of Sumatra,
the Sunda and Asri Basins offshore, and the grabens of Northern Sumatra (Hutchinson, 1996; Pulunggono and others, 1992;
Moulds, 1989). A fault zone that trends southwest to northeast, the Tembesi Fault, forms the northwestern edge of the Jambi
Depression (Fig. 2).
Deposition
The overall Tertiary depositional fill of the South Sumatra Basin began in the Eocene with deposition of continental sediments
derived from local erosion (Cole and Crittenden, 1997; Courteney and others, 1990). Characteristic half-graben-style locally
derived deposits began to fill these basins in response to the half-graben architectural style and subsidence of the basins (Bishop,
1988; Wicaksono and others, 1992). Additional synrift deposits of tuffaceous sands, conglomerates, breccias and clays were
deposited in faulted and topographic lows by alluvial, fluvial, and lacustrine processes (Fig. 4). Marine transgression occurred in
some areas possibly as early as the late Eocene (Courteney and others, 1990). Widespread marine transgression from the south and
southwest in the late Oligocene to Miocene resulted in onlap of clastic deposits onto basement rocks, development of platform
carbonates, and carbonate build-ups on fault-block highs. Carbonate and sands were also deposited around emergent islands (Cole
and Crittenden, 1997; Courteney and others, 1990; Sitompul and others, 1992; Hartanto and others, 1991; Hutapea, 1981;
Tamtomo and others, 1997; Hamilton, 1979). The overall transgression was punctuated by lowstands. This resulted in
development of secondary porosity in some of the carbonates. Lowstands also resulted in submarine fans within the marine shale
strata (Cole and Crittenden, 1997; Courteney and others, 1990; Sitompul and others, 1992; Hartanto and others, 1991; Hutapea,
1981; Tamtomo and others, 1997; Hamilton, 1979). Regional sediment sources were generally from the Sunda Plate to the north
and Palembang or Lampung High to the east (Sitompul and others, 1992). Maximum transgression in the middle Miocene
deposited the marine Gumai Shale Formation seal across the region before uplift and compression resulted in deposition of
shallow marine and continental sandstones and shales (Fig. 4) (Courteney and others, 1990; Cole and Crittenden, 1997; de Coster,
1974). Development of the Barisan Mountains, and possible volcanic islands to the south and southeast, further decreased and then
cut off and overwhelmed marine influences and added new clastic and volcaniclastic sources from those directions (de Coster,
1974; Cole and Crittenden, 1997; Hamilton, 1979). Erosion of northwest trending anticlines that were formed during compression
resulted in local Plio-Pleistocene continental deposits within the intervening synclines (de Coster, 1974). Continued volcanic
activity has covered much of the surface of the South Sumatra Basin (van Bemmelen, 1949).
History of Exploration
Early exploration was guided by surface seeps that were associated with anticlines, and led to the discovery of Kampung Minyak
Field in South Sumatra in 1886 (Fig. 2) (Macgregor, 1995). This field reportedly contained reserves of 31.3 MMBOE in the
deltaic Pliocene Muara Enim Formation (Fig. 4) (Zeliff and others, 1985). Numerous surface anticlines have been mapped in
South Sumatra, generally with a northwest to southeast trend, and are more tightly folded in the north than the south (Fig. 2) (van
Bemmelen, 1949). Until 1921 the exploration target was sandstone in the Air Benakat Formation and the deepest penetration had
been the Gumai Formation (Zeliff and others, 1985). In 1921 Nederlandsche Koloniale Petroleum Maatschappij (NKPM), formed
by Standard of New Jersey (SONJ), discovered the Pendopo/Talang Akar Field (Fig. 2) (Zeliff and others, 1985). This discovery
in the Talang Akar Formation sandstone is the largest oil field in South Sumatra with estimated reserves of 360 MMBOE (Zeliff
and others, 1985; Ford, 1985). More recent estimates have increased these reserves by more than 15 percent (Petroconsultants,
1996). This discovery reportedly occurred due to communication delays, since the drillers were being paid by the foot, they drilled
ahead after reaching the target Air Benakat Formation, not having been told to stop (Ford, 1985). Royal Dutch Shell (BPM),
Standard of New Jersey, Socony Vacuum (Standard of New York (Mobil)), and Pertamina were all companies involved in the
early exploration of South Sumatra (Zeliff and others, 1985). In 1933 SONJ (Exxon) and Socony Vacuum each held 50% interest
in Standard Vacuum Oil Company (Stanvac) that took over NKPM’s oilfields and refineries and Socony’s marketing in the Asia
Pacific region (Ford, 1985).
The Geology of Indonesia
From Wikibooks, the open-content textbooks collection
The book also covers the geological application for the petroleum, natural resources and
geological hazards. The geological hazard will also cover the recent development of
earthquake, tsunami, and other hazards in Indonesia. Indonesia is located on the Pacific Ring
of Fire with extensive volcanic network which give rise to the recent earthquake.
Indonesia is the largest archipleagic state in the world comprising five major islands and about 300
smaller island groups. Altogether there are 13,667 islands and islets of which about 6,000 inhabited.
The archipelago is situated on a crossroad between two oceans, the Pacific and Indian oceans, and
bridges two continents, the Asian and Australian. Indonesia has a total area of 9,8 million sq km, of
which more than 7,9 million sq km under water. Physiographically, the islands of Sumatra, Java and
Kalimantan are attached to the Sunda Shelf of the Asian continent. On this landmass the water
depth does not exceed 200 meters. To the east, Irian Jaya and the Aru islands lie on the Sahul Shelf,
which are parts of the Australian continent. Located between these two shelfal is the island grop of
Nusa Tenggara, Sulawesi, Maluku and Halmahera. These islands are encircled by deep seas which in
many places reach 5,000 meters. About 60 Tertiary sedimentary basins, spread out from Sumatra in
the west to Irian Jaya in the east, are identified in Indonesia. So far only 38 basins have been
explored and drilled for petroleum and 14 of the are now producing oil and gas. Seventy three
percent of these basins are located offshore, about one third of them in the deeper sea, with water
depth exceeding 200 m.
Indonesia is a meeting place of two tectonic plates, Australia and Asia. The Australian plate
was moved northward and subducted under the Eurasian plate. The subduction zone can be
traced from northern tip of Sumatra until the Lesser Islands, that creates deep submarine
trench. Most of the earthquake also concentrate in this subduction zone. This subduction also
trigger the formation of volcanic range from Sumatra, Java to Lesser Islands.
The Eastern Indonesia also experienced another subduction of Pacific plate that move
southwesterly under the Eurasian plate. This subduction create the formation of volcanoes in
the North Sulawesi, Sangihe and Halmahera.
The Indonesian archipelago includes some of the world's largest islands and the smallest coral islets.
The main islands of Sumatra and Java contain high mountain ranges and active volcanoes.
Mountainous terrain also persists into West Irian, the Indonesian portion of the island of New Guinea
in the east, and in the central parts of Kalimantan on the island of Borneo and in Sulawesi. Elsewhere
the land is low, lying either with forest cover much of which has been subsequently cleared for
agriculture, or comprises swamps and marshes associated with the deltaic mouths of rivers or on
coastal islands. About half of the territories is covered by sea with large areas of relatively shallow
water in the South China, Java, and Arafura Seas and the Straits of Malacca. There are deep waters
in the south of the archipelago, the north in the Celebes Sea and the western Pacific Ocean.
Indonesian geology is very complex, dominated by several large tectonic plates. Seismic and volcanic
activity indicates that these plates are still in motion to some extent. The deep Timor Trench, in the
Timor Sea, is earthquake active. Indonesia and Australia in 1994 agreed on a joint exploitation of a
hydrocarbon-rich area in the Timor Sea, as a follow up on an accord reached in 1989. In December
1995, they signed an Agreement on Maintaining Security. Although Australia was one of the few
states in the world to recognise Indonesian rule over East Timor, until then Canberra considered
Indonesia a military danger. Foreign oil firms are operating in the Timor Sea, where they have
developed large gas and oil discoveries. Indonesia is located at the meeting point of the Australian,
Pacific and South-East Asian plates. The Indian Plate passed close to Sumatra before colliding with
Eurasia. As a result, the Indonesian archipelago comprises a number of Middle to Late Tertiary-aged
back arc basins strung out parallel to the main chain of mountains which has been thrown up by the
collision of the tectonic plates. The back arc basins have been filled with deltaic clastics mostly shed
off adjacent shield areas. Invasion later by the sea resulted in deposition of platform carbonates and
the build up of reefal limestones. Source rocks for these basins are frequently anoxic shales
deposited in restricted lagoonal conditions in Early Tertiary grabens under the back arcs. Until
recently all the major discoveries in Indonesia were associated with Tertiary sediments or, locally, with
either basement or Tertiary volcanics. The oil and gas in the latter two are said to be sourced from
Tertiary sediments. The Pre-Miocene rocks of South-East Asia and the potential for new oil and gas
discoveries in these rocks are now the subject of wide interest in the industry. A number of major Pre-
Miocene discoveries have been made during the past decade, including the Bach Ho (White Tiger) off
south-eastern Vietnam. The field has about 200m barrels of oil in fractured and altered granitic
basement. But the Pre-Miocene section is still relatively under-explored in much of South-East Asia.
Discoveries in this section during the past six years have served to stimulate interest in it. In Pre-
Miocene reservoirs on the Chinese side, for example, there are "buried hills" of prime importance to
geologists. In Indonesia, where the western regions are mature while the east is largely unexplored,
Eocene sandstones serving as a main reservoir have proved to contain large reserves of natural gas.
A case in point is the Arco-operated Pagerungan field in the East Java Sea, which has major gas
deposits in Eocene sandstones. Indonesia has 60 sedimentary basins, of which 36 in the mature west
have been fully explored and 14 of them are now producing oil and gas. In the under- explored east,
39 Tertiary and Pre-Tertiary basins could be rich in hydrocarbons. But the eastern regions are remote,
mountainous and jungle-clad, and lack infrastructure. A wildcat in Irian Jaya, a frontier region, can
cost up to $40m, and in many cases helicopters are required to transport equipment and supplies.
About 75% of exploration is located in producing concessions in western Indonesia. There are four oil
producing regions: Sumatra, the Java Sea, East Kalimantan and Natuna. There are three main gas
regions: East Kalimantan, Arun and Natuna. The main hydrocarbon provinces in Indonesia are the
following: Sumatra, the biggest and longest island in Indonesia to the west, accounts for more than
60% of Indonesia's oil production. There, Caltex produces over 55% of Indonesia's oil. This is part of
Riau province which also oversees the administration of Natuna islands. North Sumatra, in Aceh
province, is an oil and gas producing region, with oil primarily in Tertiary clastics and mostly in small
sized fields. Arun, however, with reserves in place of 10 TCF of gas and 750m barrels of condensate,
is one of the world's largest suppliers of LNG and is reservoired in a pinnacle limestone reef. But
Arun's proven reserves are depleting rapidly. Most of the hydrocarbons in this region are located
onshore. Some potentially large gas deposits are in reefs offshore. Central Sumatra, mainly Riau
province where Caltex operates, is primarily an oil zone with a small number of gas fields. Most of the
hydrocarbons there are reservoired in deltaic sandstones contained in anticlinal structures. The
province has Indonesia's two largest oilfields, both operated by Caltex: Minas, with oil reserves in
place in excess of 4 bn barrels; and Duri, a shallow oil accumulation whose reserves of primary
recovery were estimated in the early 1990s to be about 600m barrels. Duri is the site of one of the
world's largest steam flood projects and ultimate recovery could exceed 3 bn barrels. South Sumatra
is primarily an oil province, with hydrocarbons reservoired in both clastic and carbonate rocks. Field
sizes are generally small. West Java and the adjacent Java Sea form an oil and gas province.
Oilfields are reservoired in clastic and carbonate rocks and in fractured volcanics. Numerous oil and
gas fields have been located offshore.