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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 19 (1969), Pages 239-261

Facies Characterization of Gulf Coast Basin Delta Systems, with Some Holocene Analogues

W. L. Fisher

ABSTRACT

Two basic types of delta systems contributed significantly to accumulation of the thick, Mesozoic-Cenozoic, terrigenous fill of the Gulf Coast Basin. High-Previous HitconstructiveNext Hit and high-Previous HitdestructiveNext Hit systems are distinguished on gross facies composition. High-Previous HitconstructiveNext Hit systems consist largely of fluvial and fluvially influenced facies; high-Previous HitdestructiveNext Hit systems are made up predominantly of marine facies. Variants of these two basic types, including high-Previous HitconstructiveNext Hit lobate and elongate systems and high-Previous HitdestructiveNext Hit wave dominated and tide dominated systems, are recognized on basis of specific facies composition, facies geometry, vertical sequence and pattern, lateral facies distribution, facies association, and net sand pattern.

Examples of high-Previous HitconstructiveNext Hit delta systems occur in the Lower Wilcox of Texas, Louisiana, and western Mississippi, the Yegua and Jackson of Texas, the Woodbine of northeastern Texas, and the Cotton Valley of Mississippi and Louisiana; a Holocene analogue of these systems is the Mississippi Delta system of the Gulf of Mexico. High-Previous HitdestructiveTop delta systems, exclusively of the wave-dominated variety, characterize deposition of the Upper Wilcox, the Vicksburg, and Frio of Texas; Holocene analogues include the Rhone, Po, Apalachicola, and Tabasco delta systems.


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