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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: High
Frequency
Sea Level Changes in
the Late Quaternary: Clues to Effective
Exploration in the Gulf Coast Neogene
Frequency
Sea Level Changes in
the Late Quaternary: Clues to Effective
Exploration in the Gulf Coast NeogeneBy
Cyclic sequences occur worldwide in nearly every
stratigraphic sequence; they are particularly well developed
in deposits associated with large river systems. Superimposed
on cycles attributed to shifting sites of deposition are
those related to high
frequency
sea level changes. The large
data base for this study (including 471 deep foundation
borings, thousands of line kilometers of high-resolution
seismic, and sedimentological and dating analyses) represents
the best information on high resolution chrono- and
lithostratigraphy that is available on any modern continental
shelf/upper slope. These data are used to document sedimentological
characteristics, spatial depositional patterns,
and seismic/lithofacies response during three complete sea
level cycles over the entire continental shelf/upper slope of
offshore Louisiana.
Sedimentation during periods of high sea level is characterized by: (a) thin, slowly accumulated depositional sequences referred to as condensed section, (b) calcareous-rich deposits, including hemipelagics and shell hashes, (c) wide lateral continuity, and (d) high amplitude acoustic response. Sedimentation during periods of low sea level are characterized by: (a) variable-thickness, rapidly accumulated sequences referred to as expanded sections, (b) coarse-grained clastic deposits, including abundant sands and gravels, (c) well-defined depositional trends, and (d) a wide variety of seismic responses.
Even though the data set covers only a short period of
geologic time (240,000 years), these high
frequency
events
are responsible for the deposition of excellent reservoir quality
facies in well-defined and predictable trends. An
understanding of the facies relationships resulting from
these high
frequency
events will aid in the interpretation of
the complex sequence of deeply buried Neogene sediments
in the northern Gulf of Mexico basin and aid in correlation of
the various lithofacies.
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