About This Item
- Full text of this item is not available.
- Abstract PDFAbstract PDF(no subscription required)
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Late Cretaceous Volcanism in South and
Central Texas -
Stratigraphic
,
Structural
,
and Seismic Models
Stratigraphic
,
Structural
,
and Seismic ModelsBy
Since their discovery in 1915, hydrocarbon traps in and
around "serpentine plugs" have produced about 47 million
barrels of oil, and have significant potential for additional small
discoveries. Production is from isolated reservoirs within
mounds of altered volcanic tuff and associated shoal-water
carbonates. A review of the more than 200 volcanic centers
and intrusive bodies of South and Central Texas has led to
development of
stratigraphic
and seismic models useful in
exploration and production.
The so-called serpentine plugs are largely tuff mounds
formed by accumulation of volcanic ash (altered to palagonite) on the seafloor
around a submarine volcanic vent. Volcanic
activity waked during deposition of the chalk and marl of the
upper Austin and lower Taylor Groups (about 80 million years
ago). After their eruption, the tuff mounds localized the
deposition of shoal-water carbonates with-good porosity and permeability. Low-permeability, organic-rich marine shale
and marl d the Taylor Group capped the carbonates, serving
as both a hydrocarbon source and a
stratigraphic
seal.
Compactional draping of overlying San Miguel and Olmos
sands, with minor offset faulting, created important additional
traps in South Texas.
Central Texas volcanic centers are highly aligned along strike-oriented regional faults and fractures of the Balcones and Luling systems. The magmas in both Central and South Texas were ultramafic and alkaline, suggesting that partial melting occurred at depths of about 40 miles (60 kilometers). The magma row rapidly to the surface, probably in an extensional mesa regime controlled by pre-Tertiary Balcones- Luling faults.
The palagonite tuff of a typical productive volcanic center
has low seismic velocity and is encased in high-velocity
carbonates. The strong velocity contrast, coupled with the
distinctive shape of the tuff mass, yields a characteristic
seismic pattern. Modern seismic techniques, together with
End_of_Record - Last_Page 3---------------
stratigraphic
data, allow accurate delineation of buried tuff
mounds and prediction of productive carbonate facies.