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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Mississippi Salt Basin: Salt Distribution's Influence on
Structure, Stratigraphy and Hydrocarbon Accumulation
By
The Mississippi Salt Basin is a Mesozoic interior salt basin lying in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Original salt thickness in the basin was 3,000' to 5,000' over an estimated 20,000 square miles. The Mississippi Salt Basin, approximately 27,000' deep, is very clastic rich and the reservoirs are chiefly Jurassic and Cretaceous sands and a Jurassic carbonate. The source rock fix most of' the salt basin is the Jurassic Smackover carbonate and five regional seals have been identified.
Salt distribution can be separated into
various structural styles depending on
location within the basin (increasing
overburden and salt thickness in a basinal
direction). The primary forces acting
on the salt in this basin are differential
loading and buoyancy with minimal
effect
from gravity sliding and extension.
The early loading
effect
of the clastic
Norphlet and the size of the salt basin
has helped differentiate this basin from
the interior East Texas and North
Louisiana salt basins. The Norphlet and
the finite amount of original salt has created
the present salt structural styles.
The different structural styles have
had varying effects on the source rock
and regional seals, therefore localizing
hydrocarbon accumulations. Most of the
large accumulations known to date are
associated with the basin-bounding
fault
/graben system. The salt ridges and
shallow piercement (salt dome) areas
have very little oil or gas accumulations.
The salt ridges high enough to disrupt
Jurassic seals have varying fetch
(drainage) depending on the shape of
the salt structure. This yields little production
on the ridges; however, interridge
Jurassic/Cretaceous structures with
more fetch may contain undiscovered oil
and gas. The salt dome area has had
some recent drilling success but late
movement and a downbuilding history
provides very little fetch. The interdomal
inversion features are again the traps to
pursue in this area and there is established
Jurassic and Cretaceous production.
The key for structural
interpretation
and successful economic ventures in
the Mississippi Salt Basin is predicting
salt movement and timing, estimating
available salt volume (for height and
shape of structure) and establishing the
effects these have had on fetch,
migration
and regional seals.
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