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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 48, No. 6, February 2006. Pages 28 and 33.

Abstract: West Cameron 76 Field and Deep Lower Tertiary Framework Revealed Using Sequence Stratigraphy Integrated with SPICE

By

Barbara J. Radovich
Silver Grass Enterprises
Sugar Land, Texas

The Miocene to Cretaceous geology of the northern Gulf of Mexico is the subject of active investigation with the most modern data and techniques available in the industry. The geology is examined here with long-cable 3D seismic data and prestack depth migration (PSDM) processing to better image from below 13,000 ft to greater than 40,000 ft. The data is also input to a new type of transform. The SPICE (Spectral Imaging of Correlative Events) transform combines wavelet decomposition with spectral characterization and the result looks similar to an “outcrop.” This bed form, layered framework is derived from all the frequencies in the seismic data and provides precise sharpboundary criteria for interpretation.

The West Cameron 76 Field area and several deep lower Tertiary drilling sites are examined to illustrate the architecture of the bed forms and faults. Emerging ideas include a mid-Tertiary section composed of many cycles of upward-thickening bed forms that represent prograding sediments filling and driving large expansion faults, Paleogene features that resemble rafted blocks as in West Africa, and a Lower Tertiary to Mesozoic extensional and compressional structured platform that shows upper to mid-slope criteria of thick wedges filling broad canyons cutting fairways to deep water.

Mid-Tertiary sediments were deposited, during many cycles of sea level rises and falls, into a complex series of large, expanding, down-to-basin regional décollements that sole out onto lower Tertiary to Mesozoic blocks. The West Cameron 76 Field area sediments are the result of a combination of changing sea level and rapidly expanding accommodation basins forming at each expansion fault. A new attribute called SPICE is applied to the data and the resulting bed form, layered framework shows distinct sequence and parasequence packages, with sands distributed in shelf to slope environments of deposition. Well log gamma ray curves tie to sharp SPICE bed form boundaries defined by downlap and onlap geometries, just like seismic data. The sequence architecture shows a thick stack of repetitive, bed thickening-upward cycles that are interpreted as prograding complexes filling the accommodation space at each lowstand of sea level. These tie to upward-coarsening log shapes. Slope fan parasequence sets also fill the rapidly forming accommodation space, and these tie to upwardfining log shapes. Pay sands are distributed among these prograding elements with distinct fairways of deposition. This architecture can be interpreted at great depths below existing well data and facies reliably predicted at these depths.

Unnumbered Figure.

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The High Island (HI) state waters area has been the site of deep drilling recently by the Shell Joseph well in HI State block 10. The SPICE sections on PSDM data show a structured platform of lower Tertiary to Mesozoic sediments in this area. These structures are extensional but in places look like compressional reverse faults. The top of this section shows features that are possible rafted blocks and major slump scars that fill in with younger sediments, similar to the offshore West Africa and Brazil shelf margins. The lower Tertiary bed forms are characterized by laterally continuous conformable bed sets, but also by packages of disconformable beds that resemble hummocky slope fans. Criteria indicative of broad canyon cuts are seen on several sequence boundaries and these canyons are filled with sediment onlap wedges. This is characteristic of upper to mid-slope environments of deposition, and these canyons could provide fairways to transport sands into deeper water. This geologic time is at the end of the Late Cretaceous Laramide orogeny. Uplift and restructuring of this area would enhance canyon cutting, erosion and redeposition of sediments to the basin in deeper water. Compressional features in the deep shelf platform may be linked to structural overprints from the end of the Laramide orogeny that could restructure the original graben/transform architecture. The Cretaceous section is interpreted as the most conformable bed-set package; possible salt welds are seen at the deepest levels of the data.

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