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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 56 (1972)

Issue: 3. (March)

First Page: 619

Last Page: 619

Title: Previous HitDepositionalNext Hit Systems of Cisco Group: Their Relation to Reservoir Distribution and Petroleum Production on Eastern Shelf, Midland Basin: ABSTRACT

Author(s): W. E. Galloway

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

The Cisco Group is a mixed terrigenous clastic and carbonate rock stratigraphic unit deposited on the Eastern shelf, a late Paleozoic constructional platform developed on the margin of the sediment-starved Midland basin. Detailed facies mapping of the Harpersville format, a boundary-defined unit within the Cisco Group, outlines 3 Previous HitdepositionalNext Hit systems that are differentiated by gross lithologic composition and position relative to the equivalent shelf edges. They are the (1) Cisco fluvial-deltaic Previous HitsystemNext Hit, (2) Sylvester shelf-edge bank Previous HitsystemNext Hit, and (3) Sweetwater slope Previous HitsystemNext Hit. The Cisco fluvial-deltaic Previous HitsystemNext Hit is composed of dip-fed fluvial and deltaic facies and associated strike-fed interdeltaic embayment facies. The Sylvester shelf-edge bank Previous HitsystemNext Hit consists of an offlapping series of elongated, prismatic limestone banks that lie along the shelf margin. The Sweetwater slope Previous HitsystemNext Hit is composed of numerous slope wedges, or fans, which include shelf-margin, slope-trough, and distal-slope sandstone facies. The eastern shelf prograded into the Midland basin by local upbuilding through fluvial, deltaic, and shelf-edge bank deposition contemporaneous with outbuilding by slope-fan deposition.

Oil pools are found in all 3 Previous HitdepositionalNext Hit systems. Productive facies include fluvial, distributary channel, and distributary-mouth bar sandstones of the fluvial-deltaic Previous HitsystemNext Hit and distal-slope and shelf-margin sandstones of the slope Previous HitsystemTop. Production is concentrated in areas where 2 broad, subparallel, structurally-related NE-SW trends intersect the mapped fluvial-deltaic lobes. The complex, lenticular geometry of these thin deltaic sandstones affords maximum opportunity for development of stratigraphic and combination traps.

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