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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 72 (1988)

Issue: 12. (December)

First Page: 1522

Last Page: 1522

Title: Previous HitCarbonateNext Hit Sequence Stratigraphy and Controls on Previous HitCarbonateNext Hit Platform Development--Case Study from Permian of West Texas-New Mexico: ABSTRACT

Author(s): J. F. (Rick) Sarg

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

Integration of seismic stratigraphic concepts with detailed field studies and geohistory analysis provides powerful interpretation leverage for deciphering the complex geologic history of Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit platform-basin areas. Changes in Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit productivity as well as platform growth and the resultant facies distribution are controlled most importantly by changes in relative Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit.

The structural history of the Permian basin during the Permian shows two subsidence Previous HitcyclesNext Hit of 10-20 m.y. duration. These subsidence Previous HitcyclesNext Hit were major factors in the long-term (106 - 107 m.y.) development of the Permian Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit platforms. During periods of relatively rapid subsidence, aggradation was dominant; during periods of slow subsidence, major platform progradation occurred.

Superimposed on the long-term tectonic Previous HitcyclesNext Hit is a series of third-order eustatic Previous HitcyclesNext Hit (0.5-3 m.y.), which controlled development of 27 depositional Previous HitsequencesNext Hit. Each sequence is composed of three depositional systems tracts: (1) a lower basin-restricted wedge interpreted to have been deposited during a relative fall and lowstand of Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit, (2) a transgressive systems tract of variable thickness, and (3) an upper, relatively thick, aggradational-to-progradational Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit platform system, which includes significant allochthonous deposition in the basin and is interpreted to have been deposited during a relative highstand in Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit. The lowstand systems tracts are composed dominantly of quartz sandstone, commonly intercalated with Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit debris beds at the toe of the slope. S quence boundaries display erosional truncation (subaerial on platform or at platform margin, subaqueous on slope) and/or subaerial exposure. Erosion and debris deposition occurs both within and outside submarine-canyon feeder systems.

Two highstand depositional styles are differentiated here: (1) a keep-up system, which represents a relatively rapid rate of accumulation able to keep pace with periodic rises in Previous HitseaNext Hit Previous HitlevelNext Hit and displays a mounded-oblique stratal geometry at the platform margin, and (2) a catch-up system, which represents a relatively slow rate of accumulation and displays a sigmoid profile at the platform margin. Individual strata units of the platform margin and slope area of the catch-up Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit system have a much longer Previous HitseaTop-floor residence time and display significantly greater amounts of early submarine cement. The underlying transgressive systems tract tends to have a keep-up or give-up (i.e., thin, drowned) depositional style.

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