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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Second-Order Accommodation Cycles and Points of
Stratigraphic Turnaround:
Implications for High-Resolution Sequence Stratigraphy and Facies Architecture of the
Haynesville and Cotton Valley Lime Pinnacle Reefs of the East Texas Salt Basin
By
SONAT Exploration Co., Houston, Texas
Recent advances in high-resolution sequence stratigraphy of carbonate ramp systems have direct application to enhancing our understanding of Late Jurassic stratigraphy of the East Texas salt basin. Currently, the East Texas salt basin is enjoying a revival via the recent Cotton Valley lime pinnacle reef play. This play element complements the existing traditional Cotton Valley lime/Haynesville oolite shoal play type. Consideration of Gulf of Mexico regional Mesozoic sequence stratigraphy and paleoeography aids in linking the two plays together in an integrated chronostratigraphic framework thus providing some predictive capability for reservoir distribution and quality.
Although the pinnacle play is currently perceived as a 3-D seismic play, regional sequence stratigraphic analysis assists greatly in locating favorable play trends and high-grading existing opportunities. In this study, I present a high-resolution sequence stratigraphic analysis from the western shelf of the East Texas salt basin derived from the integration of 2-D and 3-D seismic, with well log and facies information obtained from cuttings.
The Middle Jurassic-Early Cretaceous stratigraphy in the East Texas salt basin consists of four major second-order supersequences of approximately 15 m.y. duration. These are defined as large, regionally correlative, retrogradational to aggradational/progradational accommodation packages. Each exhibits systematic vertical stacking patterns and associated lateral facies shifts within subordinate third-order sequences lasting between 1-3 m.y., with related facies and systems tracts. The four supersequences are: Supersequence 1(SS1)-Late Bathonian to Early Kimmeridgian (158.5-144 m.y.); SS2-Early Kimmeridgian to Berriasian (144-128.5 m.y.); SS3-Late Valanginian to Early Aptian (128.5- 112 m.y.); SW-Early Aptian to Late Albian (112-98 m.y.).
The Late Jurassic Smackover-Buckner- Cotton Valley lime-Haynesville-Bossier formational stratigraphy make up parts of two second-order supersequences, SS 1 and SS2 (Figure 1). The Smackover represents the second-order, late transgressive systems tract (TST) and highstand systems tract (HST) of SS1; the Buckner evaporite/red bed facies depicts latest HST condition of SS1 and lowstand systems tract (LST) development of SS2. The Haynesville/Cotton Valley lime paired ramp-shoal carbonate and offshore detached pinnacle reef facies marks the second-order TST of SS2, and the overlying Bossier equates to the second-order interval of maximum flooding.
Within the above framework, the second-order HST of SS1 (Smackover-Buckner carbonate-evaporite facies) consist of four to five regionally correlative third-order sequences, 250-350 ft thick and 1 m.y. duration, which systematically stack in a progradational fashion such that successive ramp margins are progressively offset downdip. In detail, each successive sequence is thinner than the underlying one and each is progressively enriched in blocky highstand carbonates and proximal evaporite-red bed facies.
A typical sequence
contains an updip
anhydrite facies and
a ramp margin, high-energy
grainstone
belt composed of
a series of higher-
frequency
,
offlapping,
clinoforming shoal
packages beneath
each third-order
sequence boundary.
There is little, if any,
pinnacle reef development
linked to these sequences.
The 144 m.y. supersequence boundary marks a zone of minimum second-order accommodation (a point of stratigraphic turnaround) and serves as a regional stratigraphic datum useful for hanging well log cross-sections. This surface is recognized in well logs by analyzing the vertical stacking patterns of third-order sequences, as recorded by overall thickness trends, and the ratio of blocky highstand carbonates
Figure 1. Schematic regional cross-section for the Mesozoic of the The Gulf Coast. Schematic based on regional 2-D seismic, well log cross-sections, core/cuttings information from Texas subsurface and outcrop data from Northeast Mexico.
End_Page 16---------------
low gamma ray
response
) to spikey,
transgressive carbonates
(high
gamma ray
response
). By tieing
the wells to
the 3-D seismic with
velocity suneys, the
true geometry of
the 144 m.y. terminal
progradational
ramp sequence is
defined. Downdip
from the terminal
ramp margin of the
underlying second-order HST, 2-3
basinally restricted
reef cycles are recognized
within older,
larger downdip pinnacle
reefs which
were in a mid-slope
position. These basinally
restricted reef cycles record the initial floodback following
the 144 m.y. relative sea-level drop
and they have no equivalent ramp carbonate
on the shelf, which may have been
subaerially exposed.
Updip from the terminal ramp margin, above the 144 m.y. horizon, the second-order TST of SS2 (Haynesville/Cotton Valley lime carbonate shoal-pinnacle reef facies) consists of 4-5 regionally correlative third-order ramp sequences and 4-5 pinnacle reef cycles, each 50-150 ft thick, lasting 1 m.y. Pinnacle reef cycles are detached in plan view from the ramp cycles, yet linked in accommodation space and time. Ramp sequences systematically stack in a retrogradational or aggradational fashion, whereas individual pinnacle reefs progressively decrease in diameter as they aggraded vertically. Each ramp sequence consisted of an updip, proximal evaporite-red bed facies, a ramp-margin oolite shoal belt (traditional Haynesville reservoirs), and an outer ramp slope composed of muddy, argillaceous carbonate. During the second-order regional transgression (TST of SS2) older pinnacle reefs, over 1300 ft thick, grew in progressively deeper water and were eventually stranded downdip, passing updip to younger pinnacles, typically less than 300-500 ft thick, which grew in successively more landward positions. Younger pinnacles are missing the earlier reef cycles, are not as tall, and are enriched in shallower-water facies as compared to their older, downdip counterparts.
Through high-resolution correlation of ramp sequences with reef cycles, guided by integrated seismic and well log control, updip oolite shoal regional porosity can be correlated directly with time-equivalent pinnacle reef reservoirs, casting light on porosity distribution as well as mechanisms for porosity development within the East Texas salt basin. The top of the Cotton Valley lime/Haynesville carbonate is a diachronous surface characterized by appreciable depositional topography, onlapped by the Bossier shale along a well-documented submarine condensed section. Little evidence exists for a relative sea-level drop at this surface.
A high-resolution sequence stratigraphic
model which summarizes the Smackover-
Buckner-Cotton Valley Lime/Haynesville
(Lou-Ark) stratigraphy is presented
in Figures 1 and 2. Figure 2 depicts the
accommodation history over the temporal
interval of concern. In this model,
beneath the
composite accommodation
changes are
produced by superimposing
high-
frequency
4th-3rd-order relative
sea-level changes and
lower
frequency
2ndorder
relative sea-level
changes on background,
regional tectonic, subsidence.
The horizontal
axis (Figure 2) represents
time moving forward
from left to right.
The vertical axis depicts
changes in sea level. The
timing of second-order
systems tracts are shown
at the top of the diagram.
Each high-
frequency
eustatic cycle (eustatic
beat) is numbered from
0 to 12. As each beat
floods the ramp top,
sedimentation takes
place (light gray stipple
high -
frequency
sea-level
curve in Figure 2; "PWD" refers to paleowater
depth and delta X shows changes in
PWD). During high-
frequency
submergence,
the top of the sediment surface
climbs from lower left to upper right
in the diagram. When high-
frequency
sea
level falls beneath the ramp top (times
depicted by darker vertical shading),
marine sedimentation ceases.
Due to the effects of composite eustasy,
the proportion of marine submergence
and concomitant sedimentation to exposure
and non-deposition per high-
frequency
beat varies systematically as
the beats migrate through the lower-
frequency
2nd-order eustatic cycles. These
systematic and sequential changes in
accommodation space during eustatic
beats result in a predictable stacking
architecture of high-
frequency
stratigraphic
cycles. Eustatic beats 0-4 are
within the 2nd-order highstand systems
tract, and each eustatic beat is capable of
generating one stratigraphic cycle.
During the 2nd-order HST, accommodation is progressively declining and submergence- prone eustatic beats pass into exposure- prone eustatic beats. Thus, ramp cycles 1-4 thin upward and prograde laterally into
Figure 2. Composite accommodation model proposed for Lou-Ark stratigraphy
End_Page 17---------------
the basin. Each ramp cycle has an updip evaporite facies (Buckner), a mid-ramp quiet-water facies, a ramp crest grainstone oolitic facies and a ramp slope facies. Small patches of biohermal or reefal facies are depicted by dark grey shading and these biohermal entities are located at the seaward margin of the ramp crest or slightly down the ramp slope. Biohermal masses within cycles 1-3 are spatially restricted and inhibited from becoming pinnacle buildups due to two factors: (1) the declining accommodation within 2nd-order HST, each bioherma1 entity is smothered in carbonate sand from above as the next cycle progrades out and over the bioherm (2) related to the same accommodation problem, "nasty" bank water of elevated salinities from the Buckner facies washes seaward over the bioherms adversely affecting their growth.
The 2nd-order HST passes into the 2nd-order LST between eustatic beats 4 and 5 where the rate of 2nd-order fall is at a maximum (the inflection point on the 2ndorder eustatic curve). This point marks the 2nd-order super-sequence boundary and equates hypothetically to the 144 m.y. supersequence boundary in the Lou-Ark framework presented previously. In this position of stratigraphic reversal, the system turns around from progradation related to progressive accommodation loss, to retrogradation caused by progressive accommodation gain.
From here on, each high-
frequency
beat
becomes progressively submergence
prone and the ramp cycles display a retrogradational
stacking architecture with
increasing topographic relief as they
march updip. Pinnacle buildup development is now promoted as problems (1) and
(2) outlined previously are deviated. For
example, between ramp cycles 4 and 5,
biohermal growth which initiated during
cycle 4 can continue because the ramp
crest of cycle 5 (or rollover point) is now
located slightly updip, or landward, of the
ramp crest of cycle 4. Because of this relationship,
it is hypothesized that the bioherma1
contribution from cycle 5 will stack
vertically on the ready-made foundation of
the healthy bioherm from cycle 4.
The 2nd-order TST occurs between eustatic
beats 6- 12 as the rate of 2nd-order fall
declines, and passes through its trough
and back into a 2nd-order rise. The composite
eustatic effect each of high-
frequency
beat becomes progressively submergence-
prone and overall accommodation
increases, promoting pinnacle development.
In detail, above cycle 5, each reef
cycle is broken into its high-
frequency
transgressive and regressive phases. The
net result is that each pinnacle buildup is
cyclic with contributions from 2 to 4
eustatic beats. The furthest downdip
pinnacle reef consists of contributions
from cycle 4 through the transgressive
part of cycle 7. By contrast, the most
updip pinnacle only contains contributions
from cycle 8 and the transgressive
phase of cycle 9. The most downdip pinnacles
are therefore the oldest and were
drowned during the overall regional 2nd-order
transgression prior to the inception of
the most updip pinnacle. A lack of appreciation
of the true chronostratigraphic and
dynamic relations summarized here has
lead to the misperception by some workers
that the downdip pinnacles are deep water
and the updip pinnacles shallow water.
With respect to internal facies composition
and petrophysical parameters, each pinnacle
is vertically heterogeneous.
End_Page 18---------------
Inspection of thin sections from cuttings
and rotary sidewall cores, coupled with
core descriptions from various operators,
indicates that the transgressive phase of
each pinnacle reef consists of slightly
argillaceous lime wackestones (increased
gamma ray count) composed of thrombolitic
facies or microbiolite facies marked
by an abundance of algal bin- and clotting.
These facies, with associated delicate
deeper-water skeletal allochems, suggest
moderate water depths related to high-
frequency
rise in sea level. The maximum
flooding surface of each reef cycle is
approximated by the highest gamma ray
count. The regressive cap or highstand systems
tract of the reef cycles is composed of
in situ, apparently low-energy Late Jurassic
reef-builders, such as sponges and delicate
corns. The caps to some of the reef cycles
consist of high-energy grainstones with
oncolites and abraded, well-washed, skeletal-
peloidal sand, indicative of shoaling to
very shallow water depths. On well logs,
the gamma ray within the highstand portion
of a reef cycle cleans upward, becoming
blocky to remarkably flat. A lack of
core data has hampered a complete understanding
of facies and diagenesis.
Carbonate systems in similar accommodation settings, such as the younger Sligo formation in south Texas, provide stratigraphic analogues useful for driving well log correlations and seismic interpretation. Analogous buildup or pinnacle reef facies typically occur linked to the terminal phase of carbonate deposition near the top of regional, second-order TST's beneath deep marine shales (second-order MFS) which serve as source and seal facies. Pinnacle geometries are promoted by increasing accommodation within an overall retrogradational stacking of carbonate facies belts. Differential compaction of shaly, onlapping facies around preexisting rigid carbonate buildups enhances their seismic recognition. Hydrocarbon-producing examples include the Devonian of Canada the Miocene of Southeast Asia, the Mississippian Lodgepole of the Williston basin, and the Upper Pennsylvanian Horseshoe Atoll of the Midland basin, among others. Integration of key principles from the Late Jurassic of the East Texas salt basin with these and other examples should fuel the search for other, as yet, unrecognized carbonate buildups and pinnacle reefs within similar accommodation windows in other areas.
REFERENCES
Goldhammer, R. K., Lehmann, P. J., Todd, R. G., Wilson, J. L., and Wad, W. C., 1991 , Sequence stratigraphy and cyclostratigraphy of the Mesozoic of the Sierra Madre Oriental, a field guidebook Gulf Coast Section, Soc. Econ. Paleont and Mineral. Found., 86 p.
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