About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 29, No. 7, March 1987. Pages 10-10.

Abstract: The New Previous HitStratigraphyNext Hit

By

Peter R. Vail and J. F. Sarg

Since the beginning of this century, there have been several attempts to link the physical Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit of different regions with a unifying concept. One such concept, first proposed by Edward Sousse, was that physical Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit was linked to synchronous transgressions and regressions of the shoreline, caused by global changes of sea level. He called this eustacy. Despite the attractiveness of this concept, it and other concepts failed the test of detailed analysis. Without a unifying concept of global Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit, each basin has to be considered individually in terms of the lithofacies distribution. This lack of a global Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit concept lead to the general belief that Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit was controlled by local factors, thus many universities stopped teaching physical Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit, and concentrated on sedimentation and paleontology. We now believe that seismic Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit provides a method for developing a unifying concept of global Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit that we call Previous HitsequenceNext Hit Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit - the new Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit.

Previous HitSequenceNext Hit Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit has revolutionized the way sedimentary rocks are subdivided, correlated and mapped. It is a new way to group rocks into chronostratigraphically constrained genetic intervals. These intervals, called depositional sequences and systems tracts, have predictable stratal patterns and lithofacies. They can be recognized in outcrop, on well logs and, if thick enough, on seismic sections. Thus, provide a new way to establish a stratigraphic Previous HitframeworkNext Hit ahead of the drill. They correlate throughout basins and probably globally. Reservoir, source, and seal rocks are associated with particular types of systems tracts. Previous HitSequenceNext Hit boundaries are major hydrocarbon migration pathways. A knowledge of Previous HitsequenceNext Hit Previous HitstratigraphyNext Hit concepts and procedures has the potential to significantly improve the ability to locate reservoirs within structural Previous HittrapsNext Hit, predict stratigraphic Previous HittrapsTop, and identify source rocks ahead of the drill.

Seismic, well, and outcrop data from the Permian Delaware Basin and the Guadalupe Mountains in western Texas and southeastern New Mexico are used to document and demonstrate the application of this concept.

End_of_Record - Last_Page 10---------------

Copyright © 2005 by Houston Geological Society. All rights reserved.