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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Post-Development Analysis of Producing
Shelf-Slope Environments of Deposition,
High Island Area
By
The High Island A-474/A-499 prospect was originally acquired as a structural play with some suspicion that stratigraphic traps were present. Subsequent drilling demonstrated stratigraphic traps played the most important role in hydrocarbon accumulation.
The study area is located on the outer continental shelf 80 miles southeast of Galveston, Texas. The primary geologic structure consists of an elongated northwest-southeast trending dome associated with a deep-seated shale or salt diapir. The dome is bisected by two large, northwest striking, down-to-the-northeast growth faults.
Paleontologic
studies indicate the productive intervals
were deposited during late Pliocene-Pleistocene time. The
large growth faults, combined with associated secondary
faulting, provide the primary trapping mechanism for the
Upper and Middle Pleistocene C-17 through F-8 horizons.
Paleontologic
evidence indicates these pay horizons were
deposited in an outer shelf environment of deposition (Eco.
Zone 3). These sands originated from prograding deltas
located to the southwest, north, and northeast. Sediments
with a southwesterly source were transported as sand
plumes by northeasterly flowing currents. Greatest sand
accumulation occurred at the intersection of the growth
faults and the northeasterly trending sand plumes.
In contrast, stratigraphic traps are the primary trapping mechanism in the Lower Pleistocene and Upper Pliocene G-5 through G-25 horizons. These laterally discontinuous, highly productive sands consist of submarine fan and slope facies indicative of an upper to lower slope depositional environment (Eco. Zones 4 and 5). The sands were transported into the area by turbidity flows from the north and northeast and by deepwater currents flowing to the northeast from a southwest depocenter. Many of these current transported sands were deposited on the downthrown side of down-to-the-northeast growth faults.
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