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Carbonate build-ups on volcanic highs South of Java

Proceedings Title : Proc. Indon. Petrol. Assoc., Carbonate Seminar, 1976

During the mid Oligocene, an east-west trending volcanic island arc developed south of Java, lying at a tangent to the southern edge of the Sunda Platform, which curved away to the northeast.The volcanic arc lay close to the continental edge in westernmost Java, but lay progressively further from it, in deeper marine environments, in an easterly direction. As the axis of volcanic activity progressively shifted to the north, in Lower and Middle Miocene time, the remnant volcanic highs formed potential areas for carbonate development. These volcanic highs were of varying sizes and patterns. 'Some were subaerial, and thus contributed erosional volcanoclastics to the carbonates, others xemained submerged in shallow water allowing reef carbonates to develop, while some were deeper, permitting only skeletal biostromal carbonates to accumulate. One of the last types was drilled in 1972-3 by Djawa Shell, using the deepwater rig. Sedco 445. The carbonates that were encountered proved to be of excellent potential reservoir quality, but contained no hydrocarbons. Although samples are p r , three depositional facies, all nonreefal, can be recognised. The vertical sequence displayed by these facies indicates a progressive deepening of the environment of deposition. The carbonates in contact with the volcanics at the base of the sequence, are completely dolomitized and it is argued empirically that dolomitisation is due to the proximity of the volcanoclastic sediments. The cessation of carbonate sedimentation is shown to be due to 'drowning out' of the platform, to depths below carbonate deposition. The carbonates are capped by much younger deepwater marine sediments, deposited after the guyot formed by the subsidence had been onlapped by foresetting clastics derived from the Java axis to the north.Facies analogous to the drilled carbonates are found outcropping in South Java.

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