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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 25, No. 7, March 1983. Pages 3-3.

Abstract: Productive Lower Wilcox Stratigraphic Traps from an Entrenched Valley in Kinkler Field, Lavaca County, Texas

By

Stewart Chuber1 and Robert L. Begeman2
1 Independent Geologist
2 Petroleum Geologist, San Antonio, Texas

Subsurface data around Kinkler field define a lower Wilcox shale-filled valley with multiple stratigraphic traps in the incised strata, the fill, and the overlying beds. The source of sediments is a lower Wilcox "A" delta.

The channel is 1½ miles (2.8 km) wide, 4 miles (7.4 km) long, and 360 feet (110 m) thick, trending N 30° and curving to the north at its updip end. The erosional surface becomes more areally and vertically extensive in Halletsville field, 2 miles (3.7 km) south, and correlates with the Lavaca channel erosional surface in Valentine field 9 miles (17 km) to the southwest.

Kinkler field was drilled originally as a seismically-defined anticlinal structure, and the discovery well was completed from a sand deposited within the shale-filled channel. Two additional producers, as well as 5 dry or marginal wells from this zone, delineate the sand. This bay margin sand is 2½ miles (4.6 km) long, about 1500 feet (457 m) wide, and reaches a net sand thickness of 39 feet (12 m).

Another productive sand occurs directly below the erosional surface. This upward-fining sand is part of a lower Wilcox "A" delta distributary channel complex which can be correlated across several square miles. Because individual reservoirs are discontinuous, this appears to be a point bar with clay "drapes" spearating depositional lobes.

A compaction closure exists over the east margin of the channel. The structure is caused by counter-regional dip into the shale-filled channel on the west in combination with regional dip to the southeast. Although the amount of closure, 25 feet (7.6 m), is small, the structure may have influenced overlying meander points and channel migration. Two overbank sands produce oil 700 feet (213 m) above the channel, and the compaction feature may have influenced the deposition of a gas productive upper Wilcox sheet sand 3000 feet (914 m) above.

The inferred geologic history suggests the lower Wilcox "A" section is an upward coarsening progradational deltaic sequence ending in a delta plain environment. Sea level lowering of several hundred feet caused the river to incise deeply into the flat-lying surface at about the end of lower Wilcox "A" deposition, resulting in an entrenched valley. Subsequent rapid marine transgression created a drowned valley which received fine clastics both from its marine and fluvial-deltaic ends. Sand spits developed along the valley margin as filling took place.

A present-day analog of the Kinkler field model is Lavaca Bay, a Pleistocene entrenched valley with a documented record of erosion and sedimentation (Wilkinson and Byrne, 1977).

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