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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Deepwater Exploration: Conceptual
Models
and Their Uncertainties
Models
and Their UncertaintiesBy
Mobil Exploration and Production Technical Center, Dallas
The common perception in exploration is
that deep-water sands are predominantly a
product of turbidity currents, and that submarine-
fan
models
with channel/levee and
lobe elements are the norm in both sedimentology
and sequence stratigraphy. The
reality is that, in many cases, deep-water
sands are deposits of sandy debris flows,
slumps, and bottom currents rather than
turbidity currents.
Conventional submarine-fan
models
are not
applicable in many cases. Examination of
nearly 15,000 feet (4573 m) of conventional
core from Paleogene deepwater sandstone
reservoirs in the Gryphon Field (U.K.
North Sea), Frigg Field (Norwegian North
Sea), Faeroe Basin (west of Shetlands), and
Edop Field (offshore Nigeria) reveal that
these reservoirs are predominantly composed
of deposits of sandy slumps and
sandy debris flows. Classic turbidites are
rare. Sedimentary features indicative of
slump and debris-flow origin include sand
units with basal shear zones, sharp upper
contacts, slump folds, discordant, steeply
dipping
layers
(up to 60°), glide planes.
brecciated clasts, clastic injections, floating
mudstone clasts. planar and random
clast fabrics, inverse grading of clasts, and
moderate-to-high matrix content (5 to 30
%). Cored reservoirs in the North Sea exhibit
seismic (e.g., mounded forms) and
wireline-log signatures (e.g., blocky motif)
and stratal relationships (e-g., downlap onto
sequence boundaries) indicative of basin-floor
fans within a sequence-stratigraphic
framework. Although basin-floor fans are
predicted to be composed of sand-rich turbidites
with laterally extensive, sheet-like
geometries, calibration of long (up to 2 15
m) cored intervals with seismic and
wireline log signatures through several of
these basin-floor fans shows that these features
are actually composed almost exclusively
of slumps and debris flows with complex
geometries.
In addition, coring of modem fans (e.g.,
Mississippi Fan, and Amazon Fan) reveals
a complex distribution of facies, which is
quite different from the conventional submarine
fans dominated by depositional
lobes (sheet turbidite sands) in the outer fan
areas. These recent developments necessitate
a paradigm shift from the routine use
of turbidite-dominated submarine-fan
models
to debris-flow-dominated non-fan
models
.
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