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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 37, No. 9, May 1995. Pages 14-14.

Abstract: The Effects of Salt Withdrawal of Previous HitTrapNext Hit Evolution and Hydrocarbon Systems in the Gulf of Mexico Basin

By

C. J. Ando1 and C. A. Dengo2
1Exxon Production Research
2Exxon Exploration

The northern Gulf of Mexico basin margin exhibits a large variety of Previous HitstructuralNext Hit Previous HittrapNext Hit styles that resulted from, or were influenced by, salt withdrawal. In the past decade, improved seismic data quality and geological concepts have led to a fundamentally new regional understanding of the distribution of these Previous HitstructuralNext Hit styles and their evolution in the context of allochthonous, laterally moving salt sheets. High quality offshore seismic data, recent onshore deeper seismic, and key deep well penetrations have contributed to the recognition of important similarities between offshore and onshore structures. Concepts developed for offshore exploration using high-quality seismic data are applicable in the onshore where data quality is poorer. Continued exploration success and efficient exploitation of hydrocarbon traps in the environment require an even more in-depth understanding of their geometry, evolution, and Previous HitstructuralNext Hit integrity than has been achieved in the past. Particularly important needs include better methods for predicting fault and Previous HittrapNext Hit geometries, evaluating fault seal, and a clearer appreciation for the mechanics of salt movement. Finding and producing economic accumulations in a mature area will depend on applying technology based on an integrated knowledge of the hydrocarbon Previous HitsystemNext Hit. A key piece of this technology is an understanding of the relationship of Previous HittrapNext Hit evolution to other play elements an their associated risks.

Extensive normal growth fault detachment systems have been documented in the onshore and on the inner continental shelf and appear to have been variously influenced by salt movements. Perhaps the most important advance in understanding these detachment systems is the notion that some of them originated as allochthonous salt sheets fed from the Jurassic Louann salt onto the ancient continental slope. Their subsequent evolution as growth fault provinces resulted from sediment influx and accommodation provided by salt withdrawal, the end product being a detached normal fault Previous HitsystemNext Hit with distinctive Previous HitstructuralNext Hit attributes, including remnant salt of the detachment surface. These types of detachment systems can be distinguished from more conventional detached styles through palinspastic restorations and geohistory analysis. Examples exist in the Frio and Miocene detachment provinces of south Louisiana and have striking analogs in the Plio-Pleistocene trend.

Increased emphasis on the dynamics of salt movement in environments like the Gulf of Mexico has led to a significant advance in understanding the form, emplacement history, and deformation of allochthonous salt sheets. Geomechanical modeling is potentially useful for testing qualitative models of salt sheet evolution based on purely geometrical Previous HitstructuralNext Hit restorations. Specific aspects include base salt configuration, formation of mini-basins on tabular salt bodies, and identification of potential migration pathways. Intraslope mini-basins formed during the withdrawal of tabular salt sheets. Depositional models developed to predict the lateral and vertical distribution of reservoir types in these basins indicate that the fill evolved from older basin- floor fans to younger shelf-margin sequences, with sediment progradation an progressive salt withdrawal. In many cases, the basins have ponded high-quality deep water reservoir sands accounting for a large fraction of recently discovered hydrocarbon reserves in the Gulf. Improved knowledge of the salt withdrawal process coupled with higher quality seismic data give rise to concepts with implications for new hydrocarbon plays beneath salt, higher confidence models of Previous HittrapNext Hit geometry where data are poor, prediction of secondary migration pathways, and perhaps the prediction of controls on subtle Previous HittrapTop formation or favorable reservoir distribution.

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