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Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 92, No. 4 (April 2008), P. 417-442.

Copyright copy2008. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI:10.1306/11140707076

Upper Jurassic updip stratigraphic trap and associated Smackover microbial and nearshore carbonate facies, eastern Previous HitGulfNext Hit coastal plain

Ernest A. Mancini,1 William C. Parcell,2 Wayne M. Ahr,3 Victor O. Ramirez,4 Juan Carlos Llinas,5 Milo Cameron6

1Department of Geological Sciences and Center for Sedimentary Basin Studies, P.O. Box 870338, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487; [email protected]
2Department of Geology and Geography, Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas 67260; [email protected]
3Department of Geology, Texas AampM University, 3115 College Station, Texas 77843-3115; [email protected]
4Department of Geological Sciences, Box 870338, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487; present address: Ecopetrol, Bogota, Colombia; [email protected]
5Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit Exploration, Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, Lake Robbins Dr. 1201, The Woodlands, Texas 77380; [email protected]
6Department of Geological Sciences, Box 870338, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

The development of Little Cedar Creek Previous HitfieldNext Hit in the eastern Previous HitGulfNext Hit coastal plain of the United States has shown that the current exploration strategy used to find hydrocarbon-productive microbial and high-energy, nearshore carbonate facies in the Upper Jurassic Smackover Formation requires refinement to increase the probability of identifying and delineating these potential reservoir facies. In this Previous HitfieldNext Hit, the petroleum trap is a stratigraphic trap characterized by microbial boundstone and packstone and nearshore grainstone and packstone reservoirs that are underlain and overlain by lime mudstone and dolomudstone to wackestone and that grade into lime mudstone and dolomudstone near the depositional updip limit of the Smackover Formation. Reservoir rocks trend from southwest to northeast in the Previous HitfieldNext Hit area. The grainstone and packstone reservoir is thickest in the central part of the Previous HitfieldNext Hit. The boundstone reservoir is thickest in local buildups that are composed of thrombolites in the southern part of the Previous HitfieldNext Hit and is absent along the northern margin. These reservoir facies are interpreted to have accumulated in water depths of approximately 3 m (10 ft) and in 5 km (3 mi) of the paleoshoreline. In contrast to most other thrombolites identified in the Previous HitGulfNext Hit coastal plain, these buildups did not grow directly on paleohighs associated with Paleozoic crystalline rocks. The characterization and modeling of the petroleum trap and reservoirs at Little Cedar Creek Previous HitfieldNext Hit provide new information for use in the formulation of strategies for exploration of other Upper Jurassic hydrocarbon productive microbial and related facies associated with stratigraphic traps in the Previous HitGulfTop coastal plain.

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