About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 66 (1982)

Issue: 5. (May)

First Page: 608

Last Page: 608

Title: Depositional History and Seismic Stratigraphy of Lower Cretaceous Rocks, National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska and Adjacent Areas: ABSTRACT

Author(s): C. M. Molenaar

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

Knowledge of depositional history of Lower Cretaceous rocks in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska is necessary for predicting the occurrence of potential sandstone reservoirs. These rocks range in thickness from 7,000+ m along the Colville basin axis to about 1,200 m on the Barrow arch. Lower Neocomian strata on the north flank of the basin consist of southward prograding marine shelf and slope deposits of shale and minor sandstone units. Uplift, erosion, and subsequent transgression on the northernmost flank of the basin resulted in deposition of the pebble shale unit in late Neocomian time and termination of the northern provenance. Following this, the basin was downwarped, and little deposition occurred on the north flank until distal, deep-water deposits of the orok Formation onlapped and downlapped the south-dipping flank of the basin in middle or late Albian time.

Figure

On the south flank of the basin, southern-source turbidites of the Okpikruak Formation (early Neocomian) accumulated in a subsiding foredeep and were subsequently thrust northward in late Neocomian or Aptian time. The Fortress Mountain Formation (early Albian), which consists of as much as 3,000 m of mainly deep-water deposits, unconformably overlies the Okpikruak and older rocks on the southernmost flank of the basin. Filling of the Colville basin occurred in middle to late Albian time as thick prodeltaic and deltaic deposits of the Torok Formation and Nanushuk Group, respectively, prograded across the basin from the south on the south side of the basin, but prograded principally from the west-southwest over most of the basin.

End_of_Article - Last_Page 608------------

Copyright 1997 American Association of Petroleum Geologists