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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received March 9, 1998; revised manuscript received April 13, 1999;
final acceptance June 28, 1999.
2Marathon Oil Company, P.O. Box 3128,
Computer
-Aided Interpretation, Houston,
Texas 77056; e-mail: [email protected]
3Department of Geology and Geography, West Virginia University, Morgantown,
West Virginia 26506.
Geological
and Economic Survey for well
data
and the sonic and density logs for subsurface mapping and synthetic seismic modeling.
We also benefited from the application of the
computer
software packages of the MCS
(Mapping-
Contouring
System), SURFACE III, DEAM (
Data
Editing and Management), DIG
(Digitization), and the programs for synthetic seismic analysis. This paper benefited from
suggestions by Jeffrey A. Karson (Duke University) and journal reviews by William A.
Thomas, an anonymous reviewer, and the elected editor Neil F. Hurley. Thanks also go to
Sharon L. Crawford, Thomas R. Evans, and Charles A. Meeder (Marathon Oil Company) for
their support.
ABSTRACT
The Rome trough, a northeast-trending graben, is that part of the Cambrian interior rift system that extends into the central Appalachian foreland basin in eastern North America. On the basis of changes in graben polarity and rock thickness shown from exploration and production wells, seismic lines, and gravity and magnetic intensity maps, we divide the trough into the eastern Kentucky, southern West Virginia, and northern West Virginia segments. In eastern Kentucky, the master synthetic fault zone consists of several major faults on the northwestern side of the trough where the most significant thickness and facies changes occur. In southern West Virginia, however, a single master synthetic fault, called the East-Margin fault, is located on the southeastern side of the trough. Syndepositional motion along that fault controlled the concentrated deposition of both the rift and postrift sequences. The East-Margin fault continues northward into the northern West Virginia segment, apparently with less stratigraphic effect on postrift sequences, and a second major normal fault, the Interior fault, developed in the northern West Virginia segment. These three rift segments are separated by two basement structures interpreted as two accommodation zones extending approximately along the 38th parallel and Burning-Mann lineaments.
Computer
-aided interpretation of seismic
data
and subsurface geologic mapping indicate
that the Rome trough experienced several major phases of deformation throughout the
Paleozoic. From the Early(?)-Middle Cambrian (pre-Copper Ridge deposition), rapid
extension and rifting occurred in association with the opening of the Iapetus-Theic Ocean
at the continental margin. The Late Cambrian-Middle Ordovician phase (Copper Ridge to
Black River deposition) was dominated by slow differential subsidence, forming a successor
sag basin that may have been caused by postrift thermal contraction on the passive
continental margin. Faults of the Rome trough were less active from the Late
Ordovician-Pennsylvanian (post-Trenton deposition), but low-relief inversion structures
began to form as the Appalachian foreland started to develop. These three major phases of
deformation are speculated to be responsible for the vertical stacking of different
structural styles and depositional sequences that may have affected potential reservoir
facies, trapping geometry, and hydrocarbon accumulation.
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