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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Stratigraphy and Its Role in the Future Exploration for
Oil
and Gas
in the Gulf Coast *
Oil
and Gas
in the Gulf Coast
By
*Paper presented before the Society December 5, 1960.
The Gulf Coast of the United States is part of a large Mediterranean Sea area which has been in existence since Upper Jurassic. The many structural features within and adjacent to this basin which have profoundly influenced sedimentation are pointed out.
Some principles of stratigraphy which must be understood
in order to decipher the geological history of this area are
briefly revised and illustrated. The habitat of
oil
and gas, or
the depositional conditions most favorable, less favorable, and least
favorable for their occurrence, is described.
The need to make general studies in order to have a framework into which details can be fitted is pointed out, and criticism is aimed at several types of "research" which ignore known stratigraphic conditions.
Early stratigraphic studies which established the age and
correlation
and described the facies of Gulf Coast formations are briefly
reviewed, as is also the part played in subsurface zonation by Foraminifera. The present status of stratigraphy and micropaleontology in
petroleum exploration in this province is described.
The paper is mainly concerned with the application of stratigraphy
in future exploration of the Gulf Coast. The Gulf basin history is
outlined, and each of the major producing or potentially productive sections
is described as to environment of deposition. The relationship of
oil
and gas occurrence to depositional conditions is pointed out for each
section, and the exploration problems which stratigraphy can help solve
are outlined. Generalized depositional-environment sections of the
productive and non-productive formations and small-scale dip sections
showing depositional environment and structural position of the major
stratigraphic units are presented.
From the amount of favorable facies of numerous stratigraphic
sections in many areas yet to be explored, it is concluded that more
oil
and gas will be discovered in the future in the Gulf Coast than has been
found to date, and that stratigraphy will play a leading role in this discovery.
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