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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract:
Subsalt
Exploration in the Deepwater Foldbelts of the
Gulf
of
Mexico
:
Regional Analysis of a Giant Petroleum System
Subsalt
Exploration in the Deepwater Foldbelts of the
Gulf
of
Mexico
:
Regional Analysis of a Giant Petroleum SystemBy
Chevron North America Exploration and
Production Company, Deepwater Business Unit,
New Orleans, Louisiana
The geologic setting of the distal U.S. waters is characterized
by a complex assemblage of salt-related contractional features.
In the U.S. western
Gulf
, the Perdido Foldbelt is a north-south
trending zone of shortened Mesozoic through Miocene
strata covering an area of over 30,000 square kilometers. In the
deep east central U.S.
Gulf
, the Mississippi Fan Foldbelt is an
arcuate trend of folded/thrusted Mesozoic through Pliocene
strata encompassing over 25,000 square kilometers.
Approximately 80% of each trend is in the
subsalt
environment.
The difficult seismic
imaging
of these
subsalt
trends necessitates
a regional approach to understand the development and
prospect potential in these vast areas.
Our regional methodology employs source rock analyses, potential
field and basement mapping, regional structural mapping of
key horizons including the top and base of salt, regional cross sections,
stratigraphic studies and depth-migrated seismic
imaging
. Basement-controlled thickness and distribution of the
Louann Salt and subsequent sediment loading history are the
primary controls on the location, distribution, and character of
the foldbelts. These primary controls are responsible for
observed changes along the regional strike and dip of the trends
that include structural inversion. Contraction in both areas has
lifted objective intervals up to 4 km above regional elevation.
Folding accommodates only a small portion of the total regional
extension, with the emplacement of the Sigsbee salt canopy serving
as the primary balancing mechanism. Understanding the
linkage between contraction of the objective intervals and the
emplacement of the overlying salt canopy is the key to successful
exploration in these trends. Because emplacement of the canopy
is partially synchronous with folding, a correlation exists
between the structural grain of the
subsalt
folds and the base of
allochthonous salt.
Primary reservoir objectives in both foldbelt trends are Tertiary-age
turbidites, although a higher-risk poorly understood
Mesozoic section is present. Hydrocarbon sources for both
trends arc from Upper Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous marls,
with the Perdido Foldbelt also accessing potentially mature
Paleogene intervals. The combination of large structural traps,
rich source rocks, potentially excellent reservoirs, and a regional
top seal places the
subsalt
foldbelts in the forefront of future
Gulf
of
Mexico
exploration.
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