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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received August 19, 1996; revised manuscript
received March 24, 1997; final acceptance November 19, 1997.
2Department of Geological Sciences and Energy and Minerals
Applied Research Center (EMARC), Campus Box 399, University of Colorado,
Boulder, Colorado 80309-0399.
This work represents the culmination of a 4 year, integrated structural
and stratigraphic research program that would not have been possible without
the contributions of many companies and individuals. Specifically, we thank
Halliburton (Bob Graebner, John Anderson, and Gary White) for the bulk
of the seismic data; TGS and Exxon for additional seismic data (through
Peter Flemings at Pennsylvania State University); Paleo-Data (Art Waterman)
and Micro-Strat for biostratigraphic data; and CogniSeis (Roy Kligfield
and Bob Ratliff), GeoQuest, and Zeh for software. Funding was provided
through the EMARC Gulf of Mexico industrial consortium (Agip, Amoco, Anadarko,
BHP, BP Exploration, Burlington Resources, CXY Energy, Chevron, CNG, Conoco,
Enterprise, Exxon, Marathon, Mobil, Occidental, PanCanadian, Pennzoil,
Petrobras, Phillips, Shell, Texaco, Total, Union-Pacific, and UNOCAL) and
by the Department of Energy (through Peter Flemings at Pennsylvania State
University). We also acknowledge the donors of the Petroleum Research Fund,
administered by the American Chemical Society, for partial support of this
research. We thank Jory Pacht and Hongxing Ge for careful and valuable
reviews, Kevin Biddle for his editorial comments, and Brad Prather for
a copy of his manuscript. We especially acknowledge our graduate students
for their vital contributions: Barry McBride, Peter Varnai, Fadjar Budhijanto,
Zurilma Acosta, Rafael Martinez, and Alonso Navarro.
ABSTRACT
The results show that both structural and sedimentological variables
influenced lithofacies development. External factors dictated the volume
and type of systemwide clastic input. Regional factors, such as nearby
salt structures and the position of deltas, controlled the dispersal of
clastics. Local factors, such as the thickness of underlying salt, influenced
minibasin-specific evolution. These factors interacted at three scales:
(1) a broad transition from sand-rich ponded settings to shale-dominated
bypass settings during the Pliocene-Pleistocene, (2) fluctuations over
periods of several sequences that created highly variable stratigraphic
stacking patterns, and (3) a progression from ponded to bypass facies within
individual sea level cycles. Analysis of these various factors can improve
the prediction of reservoir distribution within slope minibasins, and thereby
reduce the risk in subsalt and deep-water exploration.
Structural and sequence stratigraphic interpretations of two-dimensional
seismic and well data from northern Green Canyon and Ewing Bank were integrated
to evaluate how salt deformation influenced the distribution of Pliocene-Pleistocene
facies in time and space. Two techniques were employed. First, twelve palinspastic
maps of near-surface structure were constructed. These were combined with
maps of interpreted depositional environments to show how shallow salt
diapirism created bathymetric relief that influenced the configuration
of sediment transport systems and depocenters through time. Second, tectonostratigraphic
packages comprising multiple sequences were defined based on external geometry.
Different stacking patterns of these packages characterize four types of
minibasins, each with a distinct history of salt evacuation from underlying
salt stocks and sheets. Interpreted seismic facies were analyzed within
this minibasin framework to evaluate how deep-salt withdrawal influenced
the distribution of depositional systems.
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