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GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 44 (1994), Pages 773-773

Abstract: Structure, Stratigraphy, and Depositional Environment of the Heterostegina Limestone and Overlying Sandstones in the Lake Pontchartrain Area of Southeast Louisiana

Spencer B. Street IH, B. E. Lock

ABSTRACT

The Heterostegina zone of the Oligocene Anahuac Formation in southeastern Louisiana occurs in the subsurface as an extensive shelf reef complex. The Heterostegina limestone is overlain by strata associated with the Oligocene Discorbis and lower Miocene Robulus (43) biostratigraphic zones.

Examination of electric logs and drill cuttings from wells in the Lake Pontchartrain area of southeastern Louisiana reveals the importance of the Heterostegina reef as a paleoenvironmental punctuation marking a significant shift in regional depositional patterns that occurred between the generally transgressive Oligocene seas and the generally regressive Miocene seas. The Discorbis and Robulus (43) zone sedimentary rocks in the study area are interpreted to represent a transition of environmental conditions following the transgressive reefal carbonate environment in place during Heterostegina reef deposition. Fauna identified in thin section from the Heterostegina reef interval suggest deposition in a warm, shallow-marine environment relatively free of significant clastic influx. An eastward migration of late Oligocene-early Miocene stream systems introduced an influx of classic sediments onto the ancient shelf of the Lake Pontchartrain area, which influenced the termination of favorable conditions for Heterostegina reef growth.

The Robulus (43) zone strata are characterized by a cyclic sequence of limestone, shale, and sandstone. Within this interval, two general lithofacies are identified. Litho-facies I is characterized by thick, shore-parallel sandstone deposits and is interpreted to have been deposited in association with a barrier-beach/tidal-inlet channel environment. Lithofacies II is characterized by shale-prone sandstone intervals, which are immediately overlain by calcareous mudstones and limestones deposited in the offshore inner-middle neritic environment.

Five oil and gas fields in the study area have produced hydrocarbons from the interval of interest. The occurrence of hydrocarbons at these locations with respect to mechanisms of entrapment and areal extent of the reservoirs was characterized through detailed subsurface mapping.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND ASSOCIATED FOOTNOTES

Department of Geology, University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette, LA 70504

Copyright © 1999 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies