Geological Characteristics and Exploration Potential of Oil and Gas in the Tajik Basin of the Tethys Tectonic Domain
Wei Yin, Zhifeng Ji, Bing Lu, Xingyang Zhang, Liangjie Zhang, Xueke Wang, Mingjun Zhang, Chunsheng Wang, Ren Jiang, Yue Zheng, Yiqiong Zhang, Wuling Mo, Song LiThe Tajik Basin is located on the eastern edge of the Central Asian segment of the Tethyan tectonic domain. The basin underwent intense tectonic transformation during the Himalayan period, resulting in complex structural styles, unclear original sedimentary characteristics and oil and gas geological conditions, and a complex process of oil and gas accumulation, which restricts the further evaluation of the basin’s exploration potential. Studying the Tajik Basin in the macro background of the Tethys tectonic domain, the tectonic sedimentary evolution of the Tethys tectonic domain has a significant effect on the basin’s tectonic evolution, sedimentary characteristics, and oil and gas accumulation conditions. The Tajik Basin has gone through four stages of tectonic evolution: the Late Permian to Triassic was the stage of back arc foreland basin; the Jurassic period was the stage of back arc extensional faulting depression; the Cretaceous–Paleogene period was the stage of depression basins; and the Neogene is the stage of the regenerated foreland basins. Through field geological surveys and analysis of outcrop samples, it has been determined that the Tajik Basin has developed three sets of source rocks: the Middle and Lower Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Paleogene. Among them, the organic matter abundance of the Middle and Lower Jurassic is relatively high, most of them are in the mature stage, and they are primarily gas-generating source rocks. The Cretaceous and Paleogene source rocks are mainly oil generating and in a low-mature state. There are four sets of reservoirs developed in the Tajik Basin: Middle-Upper Jurassic carbonate rocks, Lower Cretaceous clastic rocks, Upper Cretaceous carbonate rocks and Paleogene carbonate rocks. Comprehensive research shows that the Tajik Basin mainly develops three types of oil and gas reservoirs: Jurassic carbonate gas reservoirs, distributed in the southwestern Gissar Uplift and Surhan Depression in the western part of the basin; Paleogene carbonate reservoirs, distributed in the southern Vakhsh Depression and the eastern Kuliabu Depression; and multi layer–multi lithology oil and gas reservoirs, distributed in the northern Dushanbe Depression. The primary controlling factor for the three types of oil and gas reservoirs is tectonic movement, which forms traps and simultaneously reshapes the reservoirs, ultimately leading to effective accumulation of oil and gas. The distribution of oil and gas in the Tajik Basin is characterized by “west gas and east oil, west more and east less, west pre-salt and east post-salt, and pre-salt gas and post-salt oil”. Affected by the regional tectonic movements of the Tethys rich oil and gas tectonic domain, the basin has high-quality hydrocarbon source rocks, reservoirs, and cap rock conditions. The pre-salt Jurassic has the potential to form large natural gas reservoirs, while the post-salt Cretaceous and Paleogene still have further potential for exploration.