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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 50 (2000), Pages 711-711

Abstract: Subsurface Sequence Stratigraphic Previous HitAnalysisNext Hit of the Eocene-Lower Oligocene of Alabama

Andre C. Klein, Gerald R. Baum, Peter R. Vail, Peter R. Thompson

Abstract

South Alabama contains world-class outcrops of Eocene and Oligocene strata that have been the object of intense scrutiny over the past 50 years. Despite such thorough examination, these outcrops have failed to assuage controversy as to the physical nature of the Eocene/Oligocene (E/O) Previous HitboundaryNext Hit in this region. Some workers have made this faunal Previous HitboundaryNext Hit coincident with a sequence Previous HitboundaryNext Hit, while others place it within a stratigraphically condensed section during a relative sea level highstand. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that because outcrops in Alabama are limited in areal extent, large-scale stratal patterns such as onlap and downlap have not been used to place constraints on this matter.

A grid of wireline logs (SP and resistivity) has been assembled and digitized in the area of interest to examine the nature of the E/O Previous HitboundaryNext Hit on a seismic scale. The log data are calibrated to lithology and biostratigraphy using two stratigraphic test cores. In these cores the Eocene/Oligocene Previous HitboundaryNext Hit, defined using multiple biostratigraphic events, occurs in a relatively fine-grained interval bounded by unconformities. These unconformities are interpreted as sequence boundaries amalgamated with transgressive surfaces of erosion.

To address the physical nature of the E/O Previous HitboundaryTop on a regional scale, transgressive-regressive (T-R) cycles reflected in the wireline logs are currently being analyzed and correlated. Mapping T-R cycles into the subsurface of Alabama provides information that was unavailable to earlier field-based workers. In addition, such mapping may clear up other areas of contention, such as the number of cycles in the middle Eocene Lisbon Formation.

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Acknowledgments and Associated Footnotes

(1) Department of Geology & Geophysics, Rice University, Houston, Texas

(2) Maryland Geological Survey, Baltimore, Maryland

(3) Computational Biochronology, Plano, Texas

Copyright © 2002 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies