A regional net erosion map for the greater Barents Sea shows that the different areas in the Barents Sea region have been subject to different magnitudes of uplift and erosion. Net erosion values vary from 0 to more than 3000 m. The processes have important consequences for the petroleum systems. Reservoir quality, maturity of the source rocks and the migration of hydrocarbons are affected by the processes. Owing to changes in the PVT conditions in a hydrocarbon-filled structure, uplift and erosion increase the risk of leakage and expansion of the gas cap in a structure. Understanding of the timing of uplift and re-migration of hydrocarbons has been increasingly important in the exploration of the Barents Sea.
The Trøndelag Platform and Halten-Dønna Terraces occupy a central part of the Norwegian Sea Rifted Continental Margin off the mid-Norway coast. The margin is expected to hold 4500 Mbboe of undiscovered oil equivalents and represents an economically important Arctic province. The geological evolution of the area is closely linked to processes involving the Caledonian orogeny and subsequent plate tectonic re-organizations, multiphase rifting, continental drift and glaciations across the northern hemisphere. In this chapter we review the geology of the Trøndelag Platform and Halten-Dønna terraces Composite Tectono-Sedimentary Element based on published data and results of Equinor ASA in-house studies. Three new structural elements are defined for the first time: the Leka fault complex, the Vikna high and the Sula basin.
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