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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: A Compressional Origin for Minibasins near the
Sigsbee Scarp, Gulf of Mexico
By
Bureau of Economic Geology
Jackson School of Geosciences
The University of Texas at Austin
The conventional explanation for
minibasin
subsidence is that it is driven by gravity—
that minibasins exist because their fill is dense
enough to sink into the underlying evaporites,
expelling salt into the adjacent salt highs. This
explanation is valid if the average density of the
sediments is greater than the density of the salt,
but it cannot account for subsidence of thin,
less dense clastic sequences into salt. Seismic
data show that many minibasins started sinking
into salt when their siliciclastic fill was
much thinner than the 1.5- to 2-km thickness
necessary for compaction to invert the density
contrast. For such minibasins, some mechanism
other than gravity must be involved.
We investigated mechanisms of
minibasin
subsidence using a 3,600-km2 prestack
depth-migrated 3D seismic dataset near the
Sigsbee Scarp, northern Gulf of Mexico. This
dataset covers 27 minibasins of varying size
and thickness. These data indicate that
minibasin
initiation was synchronous with
shortening, as indicated by the presence of
thrust faults in the deeper parts of many
minibasins (Figure 1). A compressional
origin of minibasins is also consistent with
finite-element models showing that laterally
shortened minibasins will subside even if
their fill is less dense than the salt.
The sedimentary fill of compressional minibasins
can be divided into three stages (Figure
1): (1) prethrusting, which is typically shaleprone
and may predate the existence of a
basin, (2) synthrusting, in which sands are
deposited in synclinal subbasins between
thrusts, and (3) postthrusting, in which sand
bodies may extend across the entire
minibasin
.
Understanding
minibasin
evolution can therefore
improve prediction of reservoir continuity
in suprasalt plays.
Figure 1. Thrust faults affecting the deep section in many minibasins indicate that these
basins formed in compression. Reservoir distribution within the
minibasin
depends on
whether the sands were deposited prethrusting, synthrusting, or postthrusting. Data ©
Veritas Marine Surveys, Houston, Texas.
End_Page 23---------------
The specific cause of shortening that led to
minibasin
formation
is currently unknown. The orientation of thrust structures is
highly variable. Their pattern suggests that shortening was partitioned
by flow boundaries defined at shallow levels within and
above the salt sheet. If so, suprasalt processes may have been an
important control.
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