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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Depositional and Structural Settings
in Southwestern Louisiana
By
Lithologic and paleontologic variations within the Oligo-Miocene strata of southwestern Louisiana suggest a time of
highly fluctuating relative sea level, such that transgressive-regressive
cycles occurred in three orders of magnitude. The
second and
third
order
cycles probably represent depocenter
shifts and glacial eustatic sea level fluctuations, while the first
order pattern reflects geotectonic and geosynclinal fill-compaction
relationships.
Within this cyclic regime, migration of the massive sandstone facies, alternating sandstone and shale facies and massive shale facies of southwestern Louisiana, produce rather complex lateral facies relationships. To facilitate environmental reconstruction within this system, a new coefficient termed the facies index is introduced. The usefulness of this coefficient, expressed by the equation: Facies Index = net sand/(number of sands x shale thickness) is based on the concept that a more proximal location to a fluvio-deltaic depocenter is not only characterized by higher percentage sandstone but also by less sandstone-shale interbeddedness for a given percentage sandstone (resulting in a higher facies index).
By superimposing facies index maps on structure and isopach maps, contemporaneous structural and depositional frameworks are derived. More localized depositional and structural models, which are essential in establishing the hydrocarbon source and migration pattern as well as the reservoir characteristics and trapping mechanisms, can then be reconstructed as natural components of the regional system.
During the time of the Heterostagina and lower Discorbis
zones of the Anahuac Formation (Oligocene), regressive
east-west oriented delta front sands fluctuated (
third
order
cycles) within an overall transgressive regime (second
order). These deposits were then overlain by an extensive
progradational fluvio-deltaic system which is represented by
the upper Discorbis zone and lowermost Fleming Formation
(Miocene). This regression was then interrupted by a large
transgression which deposited a shale wedge that contained
Siphonina davisi (intermediate neritic), Planulina palmerae
and the upper bathyal Abbeville Assemblage (southern
portion of study area). This transgression was followed by
another regression and growth fault episode which prograded
the shoreline to the southern extreme of the study area
(Rockefeller Refuge of eastern Cameron Parish), where extremely
thick lower Miocene sands were deposited within a
structural embayment.
Figure
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