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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 37, No. 1, September 1994. Pages 8-8.

Abstract: The Evolving Exploration of the Subsalt Play in the Offshore Gulf of Mexico

By

Dwight "Clint" Moore1 and Robert O. Brooks2
1Anadarko Petroleum Corporation
2TGS-Calibre Geophysical Company

The existence of horizontal components of salt movement with probable subsalt traps in the South Additions of the Louisiana and Texas Shelf and Slope, has only recently become commonly accepted. For several decades, hundreds of wells were drilled into salt on the outer shelf and slope of the Northwestern Gulf of Mexico. Unless drilled on the flanks of vertical salt diapirs, which themselves were probably secondary remobilizations of ancestral horizontal salt sills, these wells barely penetrated salt features that are now interpreted as laterally emplaced horizontal salt sheets. These wells all stopped far short of drilling any significant thickness of these salt sills, and certainly thousands of feet short of testing the giant petroleum potential of today's Subsalt Exploration Play, that is now emerging in the Offshore Gulf of Mexico.

Detailed displays of the horizontal aspects of Gulf of Mexico salt tectonics combined with subsalt drilling results are shown using time seismic sections, well logs, and paleobathymetry from over 20 wells drilled through and/or into varying thicknesses of horizontal salt. The presence of massive subsalt sands such as those observed in South Marsh Island Block 200 are now well acknowledged. Subsalt petroleum discoveries announced in Ship Shoal Block 349, South Timbalier Block 200, and in Mississippi Canyon Block 211, demonstrate current success and strongly encourage future exploration efforts. As seismic image resolution continues to improve from advanced acquisition and processing techniques, and subsalt well control refines geologic models and concepts, geoscientific understanding will grow rapidly and lead to additional significant discoveries in multiple styled traps beneath the horizontal salt sills of the Offshore Gulf of Mexico. Multiple styles and areas of style dominance will be discussed.

The evolutionary vertical remobilizations of these sills have clearly structured many of the supra-salt giant fields of the Offshore Gulf of Mexico. The 1990's may well be the Decade of Discovery for this significant petroleum potential that is hidden by the horizontal salt sills that have obscured subsalt seismic images for decades.

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