Application of reflection seismics to the assessment of cool-mining-related subsidence in the Karoo Basin and neotectonic activity in the offshore orange basin
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Date
2018
Authors
Isiaka, Ibrahim Ahmed
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Abstract
The general aim of this thesis was to use the high-resolution seismic reflection
method to investigate coal-mining related subsidence in the Karoo Basin and to
assess hydrocarbon leakage and neotectonic activity in the offshore Orange Basin.
This research work is divided into three independent parts. The first part is a
shallow sub-surface investigation conducted at old coal mines located in the
Benoni area and the Springlake Colliery mine, where room and pillar method was
used for coal-mining. At the Benoni study area, the high-resolution seismic
reflection investigation was used to detect near-surface voids related to coal
mining, as well as the dissolution cavities within the underlying dolomite that are
responsible for the subsidence- and sinkholes-related features commonly observed
in the area. Similarly, the technique was used to delineate subsidence zone in the
Springlake mine, where subsidence is caused by the collapse of the overlying
strata into subsurface voids due to the removal of coal.
In the second part of the thesis, a major half-graben bounded fault within the
Ibhubesi gas field of the Orange Basin was investigated. The objective was to
assess the vertical migration of hydrocarbon and the recent tectonic activities
along the fault. It was found that the vertical migration of hydrocarbon along the
fault occurred through fault-parallel extensional fractures within the fault zones,
as well as in the relay zones within the fault segment boundaries. The results also
provide evidence that the fault is tectonically active, and therefore it is
recommended that a seismic hazard assessment is conducted around the vicinity
of the fault.
The third part of the thesis is focused on the investigation of an enigmatic circular
geological structure in the Orange Basin. Volume rendering of high-resolution 3D
reflection seismic data revealed the detailed morphology of the circular structure.
The morphological characteristics exhibited by the circular structure resemble a
complex impact crater. However, the confirmation that this enigmatic feature is an
impact structure is subject to the analysis of core samples from boreholes within
the vicinity of the structure.
Description
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Geophysics.
Johannesburg, 2018
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Citation
Isiaka, Ahmed Ibrahim, (2018) Application of reflection seismics to the assessment of coal-mining-related subsidence in the Karoo Basin and neotectonic activity in the offshore Orange Basin, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburgm, https://hdl.handle.net/10539/27137.