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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Shale Tectonics in the Northern Port Isabel Fold Belt
Trend, Deepwater Gulf of Mexico
By
ChevronTexaco
The Port Isabel fold belt lies in the southern and central Port
Isabel protraction area in the westernmost deepwater Gulf of
Mexico, offshore Texas. The northeast termination of the trend
into the northeast corner of the Port Isabel and Southwest corner
of the East Breaks protraction areas is a
unique
structural
trend with a distinctive
structural
style
. This northern
extension of the Port Isabel fold belt is a
structurally complex, linked fault system
that has been significantly affected by
regional salt tectonism and shallow shale
diapirism. Large-scale capture of
Miocene deposition updip of an
Oligocene-age extensional zone, concurrent
with evacuation of salt and ductile shale, has resulted in
structural
inversion and overprinting phases of deformation. The
structural
style
of this zone is characterized by an updip trend of
deep Miocene basins flanked by downdip large-scale rollover
anticlines. Frio sediment-cored rollover
anticlines are fringed on the downdip
edges by thrusts, shale diapirs, or
detachment folds. Inversion within this
zone is expressed by faults with senseof-
motion reversal, rollover anticlines
with basinward vergent thrusts, pop-up
structures, and shearing of large portions
of the section.
Ductile shale deformation has
increasing importance along
trend from southwest to northeast.
The Anahuac shale is an
important detachment zone within
the trend and it is diapiric over
much of the northern Port Isabel
fold belt trend. The unit is very
well imaged because of its shallow
position in the section and the
high quality seismic data available
over the area, and it thereby
provides a rare opportunity to
view the internal deformation of a
ductile, diapiric shale. The shale
displays many characteristics
similar to the deformation
style
of salt, including mini-basin formation
during early deposition,
reactive diapirism of the shale
layer triggered by regional
Figure 1. Line A-A' is a regional dip-oriented section across the northern Port Isabel fold belt trend. The shaded unit
is the Anahuac Shale. Frio-age sediments lie below the Anahuac Shale and Miocene-age sediments lie
above it. The line illustrates the regional
structural
elements in the trend. A large Miocene basin that is
in contact with the regional detachment (the Port Isabel Decollement) is located on the northwest side
of the line and a rollover-anticline of Frio age sediments is located on the southeast portion of the line.
The Anahuac Shale above the large rollover-anticline is diapiric, forming several large shale diapirs.
End_Page 57---------------
extension, shale-cored detachment fold formation, and contractional diapirism, as well as more unique characteristics such as close juxtaposition of brittle and ductile behavior. The ductility of the Anahuac shale at shallow depth is unique in that it is not caused by overpressure, as is assumed of most diapiric shales.
The trend has economic hydrocarbon accumulations
in traps created by the ductile Oligocene
Anahuac shale. Future remaining exploratory
plays will be to evaluate early Miocene turbidites
in ponded basins immediately above the
Anahuac, continued amplitude tests of the middle
Miocene, and sub-Anahuac Frio structures.
The Anahuac shale also has application as a
uniquely shallow, and well imaged,
structural
analog for exploration targets in shale tectonic
settings such as offshore Nigeria, Brunei, and the
southern Caspian region.
Figure 2. The Anahuac Shale is ductile and diapiric within the trend. Unique
structural
features
associated with salt tectonics are developed in the shale such as mini-basins and early contractional
folding of the mini-basin rims (Line B-B').
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