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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 44 (1994), Pages 757-757

Abstract: Statistical Characteristics of Gassy Sedimentary Rocks in the Northwestern Gulf of Mexico

William R. Bryant, Aubrey L. Anderson, Thomas H. Orsi

ABSTRACT

Examination of seismic data from more than 1,000 U.S. Minerals Management Service geohazard reports and core logs of 1,670 foundation boreholes (drilled to an average subbottom depth of 125 Previous HitmNext Hit) has revealed that gassy sediment sections are most abundant near the Mississippi River delta, in buried stream channels eroded during the early and late Wisconsinan, and in Miocene and Pliocene-Pleistocene depocenters on the shelf and upper slope. Of all the bore-holes we examined, 1,158 (68 percent) contained indications of gassy sediments.

The "average" Mississippi-River-delta-related gassy sediment section occurs at a water depth of 53 Previous HitmNext Hit; the top of the section lies at a subbottom depth of 10 Previous HitmNext Hit; its thickness is 12 Previous HitmNext Hit; and the sediment water content is 45 percent, with liquid and plastic limits of 73 percent and 24 percent, respectively. In nondeltaic areas of the continental shelf (areas west of 90°W), the average gassy sediment section lies at a water depth of 37 Previous HitmNext Hit, its depth below the seafloor is 37 Previous HitmNext Hit, its thickness is 8 Previous HitmNext Hit, the water content is 40 percent, and the liquid and plastic limits are 68 percent and 27 percent. In the upper continental slope in the north-western Gulf of Mexico, the average gassy sediment section is at a water depth of 265 Previous HitmNext Hit and 25 Previous HitmNext Hit below the seafloor, its thickness is 60 Previous HitmNext Hit, the water content is 40 percent, and the liquid and plastic limits are 62 percent and 32 percent.

The median areal extent of gassy sediment sections within the entire shelf and upper slope of the northwestern Gulf area ranges from 238 to 546 Previous HitmNext Hit. Although large patches of gassy sediments exist, some exceeding 10 km in size, most are less than 500 Previous HitmNext Hit.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND ASSOCIATED FOOTNOTES

Department of Oceanography, Texas A&Previous HitMTop University, College Station, TX 77843

Copyright © 1999 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies