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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 51 (1967)

Issue: 10. (October)

First Page: 2163

Last Page: 2164

Title: Previous HitDepositionalNext Hit Systems in Wilcox Group of Texas and Their Relationship to Oil and Gas Occurrence: ABSTRACT

Author(s): W. L. Fisher, J. H. McGowen

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

Regional investigation of the lower part of the Wilcox Group in Texas in outcrop and subsurface indicates seven principal Previous HitdepositionalNext Hit systems. These include: (1) Mt. Pleasant fluvial Previous HitsystemNext Hit developed updip and in outcrop north of the Colorado River; (2) Rockdale delta Previous HitsystemNext Hit, present primarily subsurface between the Guadalupe and Sabine River; (3) Pendleton lagoon-bay Previous HitsystemNext Hit in outcrop and subsurface largely on the southern flank of the Sabine uplift; (4) San Marcos strandplain-bay Previous HitsystemNext Hit, found in outcrop and subsurface mainly on the San Marcos arch; (5) Cotulla barrier bar Previous HitsystemNext Hit in subsurface of South Texas; (6) Indio bay-lagoon Previous HitsystemNext Hit developed updip and in outcrop of South Texas; and (7) South Texas shelf Previous HitsystemNext Hit, an extensive Previous HitsystemNext Hit entirely subsurface in South Texa . The Rockdale delta Previous HitsystemNext Hit, consisting of large lobate wedges of mud, sand, and carbonaceous deposits, is the thickest and most extensive of the lower Wilcox Previous HitdepositionalNext Hit systems. It grades updip to the thinner terrigenous facies of the Mt. Pleasant fluvial Previous HitsystemNext Hit. Deposits of the Rockdale delta Previous HitsystemNext Hit were the source of sediments redistributed by marine processes and deposited in laterally adjacent marine systems. Delineation of Previous HitdepositionalTop systems and, more specifically, delineation of component facies of the various systems, permit establishment of regional oil and gas trends which show relationship to

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producing fields and distribution of potentially productive trends.

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Copyright 1997 American Association of Petroleum Geologists