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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Previous HitGulfNext Hit Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 64 (2014), Pages 633-635

Extended Abstract: Mesozoic of the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit Revisited: New Data, New Concepts, and New Plays in the Onshore and Offshore Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit

John W. Snedden, Sarah Peters, Robert Cunningham, Patricia E. Ganey-Curry, Timothy L. Whiteaker, D. Eddy, Gail L. Christeson, Harm J. Van Avendonk, Ian O. Norton, William E. Galloway, Criag S. Fulthorpe, Hilary Olson

Abstract

The Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit Basin is one of the richest hydrocarbon basins of the world, with estimated ultimate recoverable hydrocarbon reserves exceeding 140 billion barrels of oil equivalent. However, opportunity space in the primary Paleogene Previous HitsubsaltNext Hit play of the ultra-deepwater is beginning to narrow and operators are looking more closely at the Mesozoic in offshore areas, particularly in the eastern Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit. This is timely as emerging new ideas are leading to a reevaluation of the Mesozoic framework history, including how the Chicxulub impact event at the end of the Cretaceous altered the deep Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit seascape and set up subsequent deepwater deposition. New models have been formulated for the timing and distribution of salt deposition and sea-floor spreading. Our understanding of the Mesozoic source to sink system transport system and basin entry points continues to evolve. Onshore Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit drilling and new biostratigraphic data from deep-water wells has reinvigorated Mesozoic biostratigraphy work. Wells drilled in the deep Previous HitsubsaltNext Hit province have altered our view of the Mesozoic source to sink depositional pathways (Figs. 1 and 2), leading us to question previous North American paleogeographic maps. Onshore, exploitation of source rocks as shale gas plays in the Jurassic Haynesville, and Cretaceous Eagle Ford and Tuscaloosa Marine Shale (Fig. 3) have generated significant drilling activity and this in turn has stimulated a reexamination of interpreted Mesozoic source rock distributions, including offshore areas of the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoTop. Our perspective on the Mesozoic exploration potential is likely to change as well, given new and ongoing seismic refraction and reflection work.


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