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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
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The Grandison area, centering in southeastern Lafourche Parish, on the Mississippi River delta in South Louisiana, is an interdomal basin surrounded by peripheral salt domes and anticlines. Hinge line flexures and normal faults help to make correlative zones 2,000 feet lower in the center of the basin than on the flanking anticlines. The main producing sands of the basin either grade into shale or are truncated onto the flexures and against the faults. One gas sand produces over a distance of more than 12 miles along its pinch-out on the flanks of four major anticlines. Isopach maps were valuable in predicting where the pinchout would occur.
The foraminiferal assemblages in the marine zones reflect ecological changes that occur across the faults and flexures and on the flanks of the anticlines and domes. The most extensive producing sand contains gas wherever the ecological conditions under which it was deposited are constant; but where these conditions change across the closely controlled Coffee Bay fault and onto the anticlines, no accumulation occurs.
Although the central part of the Grandison complex is a structural basin at depth, above 7,000 feet it is a broad, very gentle dome that makes a prominent photogeologic anomaly that has aided exploration.
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