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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 46 (1996), Pages 249-260

Thermal and Time-Temperature Index (TTI) Patterns During Geologic Evolution of North and Central Gulf of Mexico

A. Lowrie (1), R. Hamiter (2), M. A. Fogarty (3), T. Orsi (4), I. Lerche (5)

ABSTRACT

Regional thermal and Time-Temperature Index (TTI) contours were prepared for 12 dip paleo-temperature restorations extending from central Arkansas to the central Gulf Basin. The first 9 restorations are based on back-stripping of Series- long sequences above the Louann Salt with the salt not restored. Additional reconstructions through Lower Jurassic set a geologic scenario prior to continental rifting.

The restorations with salt not restored reveal that a paleo-Sigsbee salt wedge, undergirding the Upper Jurassic to Pleistocene continental slope, has been a "permanent" ocean-side feature of the prograding margin, a salt-sediment geometry not in existent salt tectonic theories. Such a permanent, and laterally, migrating "salt nose" provides an obstacle against which feature descending gravity-driven protruding salt structure. The nose migration has left a lubricating layer of salt welds and other features. This salt-surrounded unit, beneath and down-dip, may be termed a "salt-floored sub-basin" containing mostly "shallow" sediments of coastal plain, shelf, and slope genesis, and growing through time.

By Lower Cretaceous (131-96 MY) times, the salt-floored basin, updip from the then Sigsbee salt wedge, was deep enough, approximately 5 - 7 km, that hydrocarbon maturation had begun. In the Upper Cretaceous (96-66 MY), hydrocarbon maturation extended to sediments along flanks of the recently extinct mid-ocean ridge. From then to the present, ever more of the sedimentary volume has been subject to maturation. basin evolution, Gulf of Mexico, salt floored basin, salt extrusion, time-temperature indices (TTI), thermal evolution


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