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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 65 (1981)

Issue: 9. (September)

First Page: 1671

Last Page: 1671

Title: Depositional Environment of Albian Previous HitSandstoneNext Hit, Baltimore Canyon Trough, Mid-Atlantic OCS: ABSTRACT

Author(s): Brian A. Smith

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

The Albian Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit, found throughout the Baltimore Canyon Trough, was studied using data Previous HitfromNext Hit well logs, cores, and Previous HitcuttingsNext Hit Previous HitfromNext Hit COST and exploration wells Previous HitfromNext Hit common-depth-point seismic lines. The Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit is 300 m at the thickest point and covers at least 10,000 sq km; its top is at depths of 1,600 m to 2,900 m. Although the Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit is mostly Albian in age, in some wells its top is about middle Cenomanian and in others the Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit is partly in the Aptian. The Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit overlies a shale and grades upward Previous HitfromNext Hit silt to a medium to coarse Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit with interbedded shales. At the top of the Albian Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit is a well-sorted coarse- to medium-grained Previous HitsandstoneNext Hit averaging 24 m thick that can be correlated in all the wells studied. Grain-size analyses of the uppermost and were done on the Previous HitcuttingsNext Hit using an automated rapid sediment analyzer; results indicate deposition in an environment intermediate between beach and fluvial environments. The top of the Albian Previous HitsandstoneTop is marked by an unconformity with overlying marine shales. During a time of global sea-level rise, sediments continued to accumulate near the shelf edge creating the thick sand sequence in the center of the Baltimore Canyon Trough. A major sea-level drop, and subsequent rise, during the Cenomanian coincided with the end of sand deposition.

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