About This Item
- Full text of this item is not available.
- Abstract PDFAbstract PDF(no subscription required)
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Methodology for Minibasin Ranking in the
Deepwater Gulf of Mexico
By
1Mobil Deep Water Business Unit, New Orleans
2Mobil E&P U.S.
3Phillips Petroleum Company
Deepwater Exploration Team, Houston
4Snyder (Phillips Petroleum Company
Alaska Exploration Team, Houston)
Deepwater northern
Gulf of Mexico is
characterized by extensive
allochthonous salt
sheets with isolated
minibasins. Assessing
the exploration potential
of these minibasins
requires integration of
all the petroleum systems
elements. An
analysis of minibasins
in the Garden Banks,
Green Canyon, Keathley Canyon and Walker Ridge protraction
areas shows the relationship of stratal and structural architecture
to the interaction of sedimentation and salt movement.
Minibasins are broadly classified using stratal and allochthonous
salt geometries into five basin types: (1) Ramp, (2) Welded, (3)
Welded Listric, (4) Primary, and (5) Salt-floored (Fig. 1). Basins
that lack data for
classification
into the five types are carried as
unclassified. The five basin types vary in their efficiency to collect
and
trap
petroleum, ramp basins being the most effective
and salt-floored the least.
Ramp basins predominate on the slope in Garden Banks and Green Canyon. They are characterized by a south-bounding, north-dipping salt ramp. Most ramp basins have young thick depocenters adjacent to the counter regional ramp. Ramp basins tend to be asymmetric and larger in areal extent. Welded basins were previously underlain by allochthonous salt that has been fully or partially evacuated. They increase in frequency southward into the Walker Ridge and Keathley Canyon protraction areas. Welded listric (Roho) basins have south-dipping arcuate faults that sole into the evacuating salt. Welded basins have a multitude of patterns of internal faulting and sediment fill, some are symmetrical with bowl-shaped fill, others have multiple depositional axes and bi-directional stratal fill. Primary basins show no evidence of allochthonous salt and display continuous sedimentary fill horn Cretaceous to Recent. Salt-floored basins are underlain by continuous allochthonous salt that shields them from the underlying petroleum kitchens. Salt-floored basins occur along the down-dip edge of allochthonous salt near the Sigsbee escarpment and above very young salt sheets in Garden Banks and Green Canyon.
As basin fill changes through geologic time, each of the
basins has differing capability to receive and internally distribute
the petroleum it receives via a complex plumbing system from
sources at greater depths below the basin. Regional
classification
of the basin types combined with mapping the sequence stratigraphy
framework within the basins provides a spatial and time
framework for evaluating risk more effectively. In general, petroleum
entry points to basin strata are controlled through time by
salt movement and geometry.
Using this basin ranking method, ramp basins have attractive plumbing and enhanced trapping focus. Welded and welded listric basins are dependent on the evacuation of the salt floor for charging to occur; therefore the age and areal extent of
Figure 1. Minibasin Types.
End_Page 23---------------
the weld are factors. Primary basins appear to have access to underlying sources, but they may lack effective migration pathways and trapping geometries. Salt-floored basins are the lowest ranked basins because of separation from source. Within the four protraction areas, most discoveries have been in ramp and welded minibasins (about 1 BBOE in each basin type). Primary, salt floored, and unclassified basins haw minor discoveries, with none of significant size.
Acknowledgments
This paper was presented at the September 1998 AAPG Hedberg
Research Conference, Integration of Geologic Models for
Understanding Risk in the Gulf of Mexico. It is a synopsis of part
of the work resulting from an alliance between Mobil deep water
business unit and Phillips Petroleum's North American exploration
group. The alliance regional study group was charged with
developing a regional framework and risk scenarios in which to
evaluate prospects in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. One of the
methods was the delineation and
classification
of minibasins
based on internal stratal geometry, salt withdrawal styles, accessibility
to petroleum charge, and internal petroleum migration
focus. The minibasin
classification
scenario presented incorporates
prior published research on salt tectonics and depositional
systems focused toward regional risk assessment.
End_of_Record - Last_Page 25---------------