Global discovered resources of oil and gas in giant stratigraphic and structural-stratigraphic combination traps have increased by nearly 50% in the last 17 years. Among the biggest contributors are the large discoveries in deepwater turbidite systems in passive margins and rift basins. The current study area is located in the Barmer Basin in northwestern India. Barmer Basin is a prolific petroliferous basin with major oil discoveries in structural plays including Mangala, Bhagyam, and Aishwariya fields. The principal reservoirs in the structural highs are high-quality fluvial sandstones of the Paleocene Fatehgarh Formation. Lacustrine turbidite plays have been discovered in the overlying Paleocene Barmer Hill Formation, albeit with moderate to poor reservoir quality. The potential exists, however, for finding off-structure lacustrine deepwater turbidite plays in the Paleocene Fatehgarh with reservoir quality comparable to the high-quality fluvial facies encountered updip in the structural plays. An integrated approach was adopted to identify stratigraphic entrapments across the basin to chase high-quality Fatehgarh reservoirs. Gross depositional environment maps integrating new geoscientific data were created, followed by well-calibrated seismic geomorphology and seismic facies interpretations to identify the distal lacustrine deepwater turbidite system fed by the updip fluvial Fatehgarh systems. Worldwide, the critical risk elements associated with such plays are reservoir presence, quality, and lateral seal. Geophysical tools like unsupervised seismic waveform classification, spectral decomposition, and seismic inversion were applied to the available seismic data, and the results were integrated with the regional geology and well facies information to derisk the critical risk segments.
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