By Marcel Chin-A-Lien, January 2026. Abstract.
Suriname’s flagship onshore producing province—centered on the Tambaredjo Field and related Saramacca crudes—exists because a single structural element kept “winning” through geologic time: the Bakhuys (Bakhuis) Horst.
This long-lived basement high was born from reactivation of an inherited shear corridor and later maintained by subtle uplift that shaped stratigraphy, preserved closure, and repeatedly reopened migration plumbing. In a petroleum systems sense, the Bakhuys Horst did more than host a trap: it likely served as a regional collector, capturing hydrocarbons generated in offshore Albian–Cenomanian–Turonian (ACT) marine source-rock kitchens (Golden Lane fairway) and delivering them into durable onshore closures.
Public-domain syntheses from Staatsolie and industry sources consistently emphasize the importance of Cretaceous source intervals and mature offshore kitchens along Suriname’s margin. [oai_citation:1‡staatsolie.com](https://www.staatsolie.com/media/j5ia3igl/sho2_bid_round2023-24envoi_intro_flyer_20231108.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
Tambaredjo is not merely “an onshore field discovered early.”
It is the onshore expression of a basin-scale structural design in which a persistent basement high controlled where closure could form, where sediments thinned and sealed, and where migration could focus. Regional stratigraphic syntheses of the Suriname coastal plain emphasize how tectonics and structural relief influence accommodation, unconformities, and depositional patterns—exactly the conditions that make certain corridors disproportionately successful petroleum traps.
[oai_citation:2‡Overheid van de Republiek Suriname](https://gov.sr/president-simons-overhandigt-eerste-exemplaar-geologische-atlas-aan-eddy-jharap/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
The Bakhuys Horst is one of those corridors.
It is a long-lived positive feature that (a) created the structural crest needed for onshore trapping, (b) repeatedly rejuvenated faults and fractures that can transmit fluids, and (c) drove stratigraphic pinch-outs that both record uplift and help enhance sealing geometries.
In short: Tambaredjo sits where it sits because the Bakhuys Horst made it possible for onshore closure to persist—long enough, and stable enough, to be charged.
The “seed” of the Bakhuys Horst is structural inheritance. Western Suriname’s basement architecture contains major belts and fabrics that include sheared domains—anisotropies that can localize later deformation when stress fields rotate or intensify.
Published geological work on the Bakhuis Mountains and associated basement domains documents complex high-grade metamorphic belts and strong structural grain, reinforcing the plausibility of repeated reactivation along pre-existing weaknesses. [oai_citation:3‡tectonique.net](https://www.tectonique.net/saxi/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Girjasing_etal.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
This matters because inherited shear corridors are the first to slip when tectonic conditions become favorable. Once reactivated, they can become long-lived “hinges” that repeatedly adjust vertical relief and fault permeability—two ingredients that petroleum systems exploit relentlessly.
In my reconstruction, reactivation accelerates shortly after Aptian–Albian time under a regional transpressional regime (strike-slip with a compressional component).
The driver is plate kinematics across the Equatorial Atlantic: counterclockwise motion of NW Africa and tectonic interaction with the Demerara High impose a stress field that preferentially reactivates the inherited Suriname shear corridor. The structural outcome is the pop-up uplift of the Bakhuys Horst and continued rejuvenation thereafter.
Crucially, published work focused specifically on the Bakhuis–Tambaredjo Horst addresses the timing and uplift history of this structural system and supports the idea that reactivated Precambrian faults influenced younger tectonics and stratigraphy—exactly the kind see-through structural continuity that makes a horst persist as a petroleum control.
[oai_citation:4‡tectonique.net](https://www.tectonique.net/saxi/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Girjasing_etal.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
One of the most persuasive signs that the Bakhuys Horst stayed active well beyond initial formation is the progressive pinching out of sediments against the structural high.
Pinch-outs are not just stratigraphic details; they are the stratigraphic signature of a feature that remained a positive relief element through time, repeatedly shaping accommodation space and seal geometries.
Published work on the Bakhuis–Tambaredjo Horst explicitly frames uplift as a time-transgressive process and highlights the influence of reactivated basement structures on younger stratigraphy.
[oai_citation:5‡tectonique.net](https://www.tectonique.net/saxi/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Girjasing_etal.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
For petroleum systems, this is decisive. Slow, repeated uplift can preserve closure for millions of years, allowing multiple charge pulses to accumulate and improving the odds that a trap stays filled rather than being breached or bypassed.
The Bakhuys story is not confined to the subsurface.
The Bakhuis Mountains (Bakhuys Gebergte) represent a durable physiographic expression of a long-lived structural province.
While surface relief alone never proves deep structure, the coherence between basement trend, uplift history, and topographic persistence is a valuable cross-check: the same tectonic architecture that shaped closure and pinch-outs also shaped the landscape.
The Bakhuys Horst is a multi-resource structural high. Toward the southwest, near Apoera, the broader Bakhuis uplift province hosts extensive bauxite resources.
This is not merely an economic sidebar; it is an independent geological validation of long-term uplift and exposure. Lateritic bauxite formation typically requires prolonged weathering and stable geomorphic conditions—signals that the Bakhuis structural province remained a persistent positive feature through long intervals.
That independence matters. Even if one set of petroleum interpretations is debated, the existence and scale of bauxite provinces in the Bakhuis region provide a non-petroleum line of evidence that the structural high endured, repeatedly influencing erosion, sediment routing, and accommodation—precisely the behavior that makes a horst such an effective petroleum trap host.
Offshore Suriname exploration and public-domain petroleum systems summaries consistently highlight the importance of Cretaceous marine source intervals and mature offshore kitchens.
Staatsolie’s shallow offshore bid-round materials and supporting industry coverage emphasize source-rock effectiveness and play fairways in offshore Suriname, reinforcing that the generative engine is strongest offshore—while onshore systems can be migration-dominated.
[oai_citation:6‡staatsolie.com](https://www.staatsolie.com/media/j5ia3igl/sho2_bid_round2023-24envoi_intro_flyer_20231108.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
In that geometry, the basin-scale question becomes unavoidable:
How does oil generated offshore become trapped onshore at scale? The most compelling answer is that a persistent collector structure—combining updip gradient, fault connectivity, and long-lived closure—focused landward migration and retained charge.
This is where the Bakhuys Horst becomes the star: it provides both the plumbing (reactivated faults and fracture corridors rooted in inherited shear) and the container (a stable crest with enduring closure).
The regional coherence between basement structure, stratigraphy, resources, and petroleum systems is also reinforced by the Geo Atlas of Suriname, published by Staatsolie in late 2025 and publicly presented on 12 December 2025.
The Geo Atlas consolidates decades of geological and exploration knowledge into a single integrated framework and is explicitly intended to provide a coherent view of Suriname’s petroleum geology for a broad technical audience.
[oai_citation:7‡staatsolie.com](https://www.staatsolie.com/nl/nieuws/staatsolie-publiceert-geoatlas-van-suriname/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
For the Tambaredjo–Bakhuys story, its significance is straightforward: it confirms the importance of integrated onshore–offshore thinking, in which long-lived structural trends and petroleum systems are treated as parts of one connected margin-scale architecture—not separate stories divided by the coastline.
Tambaredjo’s persistence and prominence are best explained by a single, unifying principle: tectonic inheritance, reactivation, and long-lived uplift created a structural collector that could be charged and recharged. The evidence chain is mutually reinforcing:
In short: the Bakhuys Horst did not merely host Tambaredjo— it engineered the conditions that made Tambaredjo inevitable, by creating enduring onshore closure and acting as a likely migration endpoint for offshore-generated petroleum.
49 Years of Transformative Expertise | Exploration, Oil & Gas Giant Fields Finder – Business Development, M&A, PSC Design, Contract Strategy
Marcel Chin-A-Lien brings nearly five decades of unmatched global expertise at the highest levels of the energy sector—where technical mastery meets business acumen to unlock extraordinary value.
His career has delivered multi-billion-dollar giant field discoveries, spearheaded the iconic first capitalist upstream ventures in the USSR, shaped successful offshore bid rounds, and secured enduring cash flow streams from exploration and production activities across mature and frontier basins such as the Dutch North Sea.
An exceptionally efficient fusion of technical, commercial, and managerial insight, Marcel holds four postgraduate petroleum degrees spanning geology, engineering, international business, and management—uniquely positioning him to bridge the worlds of exploration strategy, M&A, PSC design, and contract negotiation.
Fluent in multiple languages and culturally attuned to diverse business environments, he has navigated complex geographies from Europe to Asia, Africa, and the Americas—driving innovation, de-risking investments, and aligning stakeholder interests from national oil companies to supermajors.
Whether advising on frontier basin entry, government negotiations, fiscal regime optimization, or asset valuation, Marcel’s critical insights integrate Exploration & Production with Business Development and Commercial Realism—generating sustainable growth in volatile energy markets.
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Regards, Marcel Chin-A-Lien
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