Field-study of Semliki Sedimentary Basin in the Albertine Graben Area, Western Uganda
Abstract
Semliki sedimentary basin is located in the central domain of the western arm of the Albertine Graben. It is a pull apart basin formed when the Albertine graben, a product of active rifting, underwent transtensional strike-slip deformation that was controlled by already existing NE-SW Graben-forming normal faults. The basin is asymmetric in nature with a thin layer of sediments in the southern and southeastern parts but increases in thickness towards the north-west in the DRC. Its depocenter coincides with the location where the western bounding Semliki fault meets the basin floor.
The rock record in Semliki preserved several structures, primary and secondary, that enabled paleocurrent and paleoenvironment reconstruction through characteristic facies associations. These structures include joints, faults, stratification, among others. However, the structural lineaments generally manifest as short discontinuous arrays in a given trend. The basin was observed to have all the components of a working petroleum system. Kasande Formation providing a potential source rock, Kisegi and Kakara with potential reservoir targets while Oluka, Nyakabingo and Kasande are potential seals. It is also well endowed with both structural (rollover & compressional anticlines, tilted fault blocks) and stratigraphic traps (unconformities and pinchouts) as well as extensive fault arrays providing migration pathways. A high geothermal gradient facilitated early maturation of the source rock. Structural synthesis revealed timing of migration that was favorable for accumulation of petroleum.