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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 65 (1981)

Issue: 9. (September)

First Page: 1675

Last Page: 1675

Title: Late Jurassic Reefs of Smackover Formation--Preliminary Report: ABSTRACT

Author(s): Lawrence R. Baria, Paul M. Harris, David L. Stoudt

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

Algal and coral reefs are recognized in conventional cores of the upper Smackover Formation from southwestern Arkansas eastward into the panhandle of Florida. Although only one known reef has produced commercial hydrocarbons, attractive porosities and permeabilities (mean ^phgr of 15%, mean K of 20 md) result from freshwater leaching, fracturing, or dolomitization. In addition, the reefs may have provided a positive structural aspect to localized areas during later Smackover deposition and diagenesis.

Smackover reefs formed in the Late Jurassic during periods of maximum marine transgression (good circulation, clear water, normal marine salinity) in three major paleogeographic settings: (1) the margins of Paleozoic highs protruding into the Smackover basin, i.e., Vocation field in Alabama; (2) upthrown basement fault blocks, i.e., Melvin field in Alabama; and (3) the seaward edges of upthrown salt-cored fault blocks, i.e., Walker Creek field in Arkansas, Hico Knowles and North Haynesville fields in Louisiana, and West Paulding field in Mississippi. The buildups are commonly elongate, 3 to 40 m thick and generally cover an area of several square kilometers. The reefs appear higher (younger) in the stratigraphic section downdip. Also, the reefs are younger and have a more diverse biot in Arkansas and Louisiana than they do in Alabama and Florida.

Smackover reefs in Alabama and Florida were constructed by algae. Vertical relief on the reef surface during growth may have been a few meters. Similar reefs in southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana exhibit a vertical zonation suggesting an evolving reef community. These buildups are Tubiphytes-stromatolitic algal boundstones containing scattered corals toward the base; diversity increases upward with the addition of abundant corals (Actinastrea, Complexastrea, Thamnasteria, and others), sponges, skeletal algae, and byrozoans. The reefs are commonly underlain and overlain by subtidal peloidal lime packstones containing oncolites and scattered fossils, and they can develop in close proximity to subtidal quartz sands.

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