Tindouf Basin

West Africa: Tindouf Basin to the north of the West African craton

The Tindouf Basin is a major sedimentary basin in West Africa, to the south of the little Atlas region, Morocco. It stretches from west to east about 700km and covers about 100,000 km2, mostly in Algeria but with a western extension into Morocco / Western Sahara.

In the Ordovician period (490 Ma to 445 Ma) the area was an embayment sloping down from the West African craton into the Tethys sea. It became a closed basin in the Late Carboniferous (320 Ma to 300 Ma). The basin has a steep northern edge against the Anti Atlas and more gently sloping southern edge. The basin is filled with up to 8 km of sediment from the Cambrian and Carboniferous ageas.[1] These marine formations are overlain by a continental Cretaceous and Pliocene Hamada cover.[2]

The basin may have potential for oil and/or gas production, but has been largely unexplored.[3]

References

  1. Richard C. Selley (1997). African basins. Elsevier. p. 17. ISBN 0-444-82571-1.
  2. S. Guerrak (1989). "Time and space distribution of Palaeozoic oolitic ironstones in the Tindouf Basin, Algerian Sahara". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. Retrieved 2010-12-26.
  3. M.S.Malla, Dr.D.Takherist (2000). "A GEOCHEMICAL POTENTIAL REVIEW OF THE TINDOUF BASIN , ALGERIAN SAHARA.". World Petroleum Congress. Retrieved 2010-12-26.
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