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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 8 (1958), Pages 20-21

Abstract: Nature of Growth of Louisiana Previous HitSaltNext Hit Domes and its Effect on Petroleum Accumulation

Gordon Atwater (2), McLain J. Forman (2)

ABSTRACT

Intensive and deep drilling on piercement Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes of southern Louisiana has yielded a great amount of new information on these features. These data demonstrate that many Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes exhibit variations in structural configuration which depart considerably from older concepts of Previous HitsaltNext Hit Previous HitdomeNext Hit growth and from results of scale model studies. Some of these structural abnormalities have played an important role in the accumulation of petroleum.

Detailed studies indicate that the growth of Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes in this province has been characterized by intermittent periods of movement. Furthermore, evidence now indicates that, in some cases, upward movement of Previous HitsaltNext Hit from the deeply-buried Previous HitsaltNext Hit mass has varied in location as well as in time. In some of these cases, early movements of portions of the parent Previous HitsaltNext Hit mass formed low-relief structures in which early oil and gas accumulation took place. More recent growth of the present Previous HitsaltNext Hit stock, peripherally located to the older structure and intrusion, has formed new traps of higher structural position into which the earlier accumulations of petroleum have migrated. In other cases, more recent growth of the Previous HitsaltNext Hit stocks has merely truncated the older structures, disturbing them little, if at all. In these cases, the petroleum reserves are still found in the "fossil" structures, which have discordant relationships to the present Previous HitsaltNext Hit mass.

In addition to the major shifts of loci of Previous HitsaltNext Hit intrusion, movement of the Previous HitsaltNext Hit within the present shallow piercement plug has not been uniform throughout the plug. This irregularity of upward flow is demonstrated by the different structural positions of major flank segments, local unconformities on restricted flank areas, shallow Previous HitsaltNext Hit spines and deep-seated shoulders on Previous HitsaltNext Hit masses.

Shale sheath material, enveloping the Previous HitsaltNext Hit, is observed, in some cases, to intrude the normal sediments, behaving as does the Previous HitsaltNext Hit and forming an integral part of the intrusive domal material.

FIGURE 1. Index map of South Louisiana, showing major Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes.

1. Abstract published by permission of American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

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It is important to recognize that the configuration of the present shallow piercement Previous HitsaltNext Hit stock reflects the combined effects of various localized Previous HitsaltNext Hit movements. Moreover, the structures created by intrusive Previous HitsaltNext Hit (and accompanying shale) movements have been intermittently altered by shifts in the locus of movement. Petroleum accumulations in some structures have been transient in nature and the locations of present reserves represent only the result of the most recent adjustments. In other structures, petroleum accumulations represent "fossil" fields which bear little relationship to the present Previous HitsaltNext Hit stock.

Examples of some of these phenomena associated with Previous HitsaltNext Hit Previous HitdomeNext Hit growth are presented by studies of the Cote Blanche Island Previous HitDomeNext Hit, the Iowa Previous HitDomeNext Hit, the Lake Washington Previous HitDomeNext Hit, the Valentine Previous HitDomeNext Hit, and the Weeks Island Previous HitDomeNext Hit (figure 1). Each of these represents an important field and each illustrates the controlling influence that its growth history has had on the accumulation of its petroleum reserves.

Application of concepts herein developed regarding the nature of Previous HitsaltNext Hit Previous HitdomeNext Hit growth should be considered in planning exploration programs around the flanks of piercement Previous HitsaltTop domes, and may lead to reinvestigation of nearby areas previously condemned as occupying off-flank or synclinal positions.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND ASSOCIATED FOOTNOTES

(2) Atwater, Cowan and Associates, Consulting Geologists.

New Orleans, Louisiana

Copyright © 1999 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies