Neuquén Basin
Neuquén Basin is a sedimentary basin covering most of Neuquén Province in Argentina. The basin originated in the Jurassic and developed through alternating continental and marine conditions well into the Tertiary. The basin bounds to the west with the Andean Volcanic Belt, to the southeast with the North Patagonian Massif and to the northeast with the San Rafael Block and to the east with the Sierra Pintada System. The basin covers an area of approximately. One age of the SALMA classification, the Colloncuran, is defined in the basin, based on the Collón Curá Formation, named after the Collón Curá River, a tributary of the Limay River.
Description
Jurassic and Cretaceous marine transgressions from the Pacific are recorded in the sediments of Neuquén Basin. These marine sediments belong to Cuyo Group, Tordillo Formation, Auquilco Formation and Vaca Muerta. In the Late Cretaceous, conditions in the neighboring Andean orogeny changed. A marine regression occurred and the fold and thrust belts of Malargüe, Chos Malal and Agrio started to develop in the Andes and did so until Eocene times. This meant an advance of the Andean orogenic deformation since the Late Cretaceous that made the western part of Neuquén Basin to stack in the Malargüe and Agrio fold and thrust belts. This caused a shift in deposition from Pacific to Early Atlantic.In the south of Mendoza Province, the Guañacos fold and thrust belt appeared and grew in the Pliocene and Pleistocene consuming the western fringes of the Neuquén Basin.
Tectonics
The Huincul basement high or Huincul ridge is a geological structure that divides Neuquén Basin in two parts. The basement high is one of the most studied features of Neuquén Basin given its importance for hydrocarbon exploration and exploitation. All over the basement high runs an approximate length of. There have been proposals on the nature of this structure. In the 1970s and 1980s it was proposed by that it was a transpressive fault zone. In 2009, Pángaro described it as being made up of inverted half-grabens.Unconformities have been registered in the basin and were dated at 98, 117, 123, 129, 134 and 154 Ma.
Stratigraphy
The basin contains many stratigraphic units from the Triassic onwards, with large regional variations from east to west and north to south, often described as different formations that are laterally equivalent, this list is a comprehensive overview of described formations:;Cenozoic
- Tromen Formation
- Cerro Campanario Formation
- El Puente Formation
- Chapúa Formation
- Agua de la Caldera Formation
- El Sauzal Formation
- Coyocho Formation
- Bayo Mesa Formation
- Los Pinos Formation
- Pampa Encima Formation
- Chenqueniyeu Formation
- Chapelcó Formation
- Rincón Bayo Formation
- Chos Malal-Trahalhué Formation
- El Palo Formation
- Arroyo Palao Formation
- Tristeza Formation
- Río Negro Formation or Caleufú Formation
- Barranca de los Loros Formation
- Collón Cura Formation
- Cerro Bandera Formation
- Chichinales Formation
- Vaca Mahuida Formation
- Sierra Negra Formation
- Palauco Formation
- Lolog Formation
- Colpilli Formation
- Cayanta Formation
- Ventana Formation
- Huitrera Formation
- Malargüe Group
- * Agua de la Piedra Formation
- * Pircala Formation
- * Coihueco Formation
- * El Carrizo Formation
- * Roca Formation
- * Loncoche Formation
- * Jagüel Formation
- * Allen Formation
- Diamante Formation
- Neuquén Group
- * Río Colorado Subgroup
- ** Anacleto Formation
- ** Bajo de la Carpa Formation
- * Río Neuquén Subgroup
- ** Plottier Formation
- ** Sierra Barrosa Formation
- ** Los Bastos Formation
- ** Portezuelo Formation
- * Río Limay Subgroup
- ** Lisandro Formation
- ** Huincul Formation
- ** Candeleros Formation
- Los Machís Formation
- Late Mirano unconformity
- Lohan Cura Formation
- Rayoso Group
- * Rayoso Formation
- * Middle Mirano unconformity
- * Huitrín Formation
- * La Amarga Formation
- Early Mirano unconformity
- Centenario Formation
- Mendoza Group or late Valanginian to latest Barremian
- * Unconformity
- * Chachao Formation
- * Unconformity
- * Mulichinco Formation
- * Bajada Colorada Formation
- * Loma Montosa Formation
- * Quintuco Formation
- * Picún Leufú Formation
- * Lindero de Piedra Formation
- * Vaca Muerta
- * Quebrada del Sapo Formation
- * Catriel Formation
- Tordillo Formation
- Unconformity
- Río Damas Formation
- Lotena Group
- * Auquilco Formation
- * La Manga Formation
- * Lotena Formation
- Cuyo Group
- * Challaco Formation
- * Tábanos Formation
- * Calabozo Formation
- * Punta Rosada Formation
- * Lajas Formation
- * Tres Esquinas Formation
- * Los Molles Formation
- * Chuchil Formation
- Piedra del Aguila Formation
- Sañicó Formation
- Sierra Chacaico Formation
- Puesta Araya Formation
- El Freno Formation
- Primavera Formation
- Lapa Formation
- Nestares Formation
- Planicie Morada Formation
- Paso Flores Formation
- Milla Michicó Formation
- Remoredo Formation
- Chihuido Formation
- Tronqulmalal Formation
- Cordillera del Viento Formation
- Choiyoi Group
- * El Palque Formation
- * Horcajos Formation
- * Portezuelo del Cenizo Formation
- * Tambillos Formation
- * Vega de Los Machos Formation
Petroleum geology
Source rock formations are predominantly the Vaca Muerta, and to a lesser extent the Agrio and Los Molles Formations. Reservoir rocks comprise the Mulichinco and Chachao Formations. Deeper reservoirs are the Lotena and Barda Negra Formations. Regional seal rocks are the evaporites of the Auquilco and Huitrín Formations, with local seals the Vaca Muerta, Agrio and Catriel Formations.