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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 50 (1966)

Issue: 10. (October)

First Page: 2319

Last Page: 2320

Title: Geology of South Bosco-Duson-Ridge Area, Acadia and Lafayette Parishes, Louisiana: ABSTRACT

Author(s): R. O. Steinhoff

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

The South Bosco-Duson-Ridge fields area is in the Oligocene and Miocene oil- and gas-producing trends of Acadia and Lafayette Parishes, Louisiana. In wells drilled to sufficient depth, three facies were found:

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(1) a Pliocene and Miocene nearshore to continental massive sandstone facies; (2) an early Miocene and Oligocene continental-shelf facies of alternating sandstone and shale; and (3) a thick bathyal shale facies of Oligocene age. Oil and gas production in the area is confined almost entirely to sandstone beds in the continental-shelf facies.

South Bosco-Duson-Ridge fields are on a faulted, elongated north-south anticline that trends normal to the regional stratigraphic strike. All faults are normal and are either down-to-the-basin or up-to-the-basin. The down-to-the-basin faults are regional and are parallel with the regional stratigraphic strike. The up-to-the-basin faults are compensating faults confined to the South Bosco-Duson-Ridge complex. The fault throw generally increases with depth. All the faults "die out" upward in the section in or before reaching early Miocene sedimentary rocks.

Strata thicken into the downthrown sides of the faults and thin toward the crest and over the highest parts of the structure. The amounts of thickening or thinning generally increase with depth. Thus, fault movement and anticlinal folding were contemporaneous with sedimentation, continuously from Oligocene into Miocene time, and were most intense during Oligocene time.

The South Bosco-Duson-Ridge structure probably originated from faulting and anticlinal folding on the continental slope during Oligocene time. Structural growth was greatest where the structure was in the unstable environment of the hinge line (or shelf edge). Structural activity continued during the deposition of the neritic sediments of the Oligocene and early Miocene but at a steadily reduced rate. The structure was buried by a great thickness of nearshore and continental massive sandstone beds during Miocene and Pliocene time.

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Copyright 1997 American Association of Petroleum Geologists