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Eric Negulic

ES_John_Doe_210H-214W

B.Sc., Honours Earth Sciences, ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø (2008)

M.Sc. Thesis

(PDF - 126 Mb)

Many factors such as rift history, crustal structure and distribution of high thermal conductivity salt bodies throughout the sediment pile affect the present day thermal structure of the deepwater Scotian Slope. Understanding the basin's thermal evolution is crucial in determining the hydrocarbon maturation potential of this deepwater frontier basin. The Late Jurassic Verrill Canyon Formation of the deepwater slope has been inferred as the primary source rock interval for the Scotian Basin. However, to date, only twelve boreholes have sampled the Scotian Slope, and of these, none penetrate beneath the uppermost Jurassic sediments. Therefore, the distribution and maturation of deeper source rock intervals through standard vitrinite reflectance analysis remains unknown. In this study we attempt to better constrain the thermal history and maturation potential of the central Scotian Slope using a combination of recently acquired seafloor heat flow data, 2D seismic reflection data, available well data, simple lithospheric rift models and 3D thermal and petroleum systems modelling. We have derived a method of combining seafloor heat flow data with simple lithospheric rift models to provide first order constraints on the hydrocarbon maturation potential of frontier basins in dynamic 3D thermal models for regions lacking vitrinite reflectance and temperature data from boreholes.

In July 2008, 47 seafloor heat flow measurements were acquired across the central Scotian Slope in an attempt to better constrain the region's thermal structure. Locations seaward of the salt diapiric province, thus unaffected by the high thermal conductivity of salt, recorded seafloor heat flow values of ~41-46 mWm-2. Significant increases in seafloor heat flow were noted for stations overlying salt diapiric structures, reaching values upwards of 72 mWm-2. The seafloor heat flow data have been corrected to remove the conductive effects of salt and the cooling effects of seafloor sedimentation on measured heat flow. The corrected data are compared with basal heat flux predictions from simple lithospheric rift models as constrained using crustal (β) and lithospheric (δ) stretching factors after Wu (2007) to constrain heat flux history through time. Seafloor heat flow and simple modelling results suggest present day basal heat flux does not vary significantly across the slope. Present day basal heat flux across the central Scotian Slope is ~44-46 mWm-2.

Basal heat flux curves from simple lithospheric rift models are used to constrain the heat flux history in 3D thermal and petroleum systems models of the central Scotian Slope. Numerous basal heat flux histories were tested to determine which heat flux history yielded the best match between modelled and measured seafloor heat flow data and to determine how varying basal heat flux affects the modelled hydrocarbon maturation of Verrill Canyon source rocks. The basal heat flux history which yielded the best match to measured seafloor heat flow data suggests that the Late Jurassic source rock interval rests primarily within the late oil window. Variations in radiogenic heat production across the margin associated with thickening continental crust were tested and suggest that significant variations in both maturation and seafloor heat flow may occur if radiogenic heat producing elements occur in high enough concentrations in the crust.

Keywords:
Pages: 244
Supervisor: Keith Louden