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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Gulf
of
Mexico
:
Exploration Significance
By
Originally presented at the 1998 Hedberg (AAPG) Research Conference at Galveston, TX
Book/CD-ROM Title:
Gulf
of
Mexico
Edited by
Gulf
of
Mexico
Basin is an important "first issue" in
producing more accurate predictive solutions for exploration and production activities.
The assembly, analysis, and digital storage of a large oil geochemical data set for the
region provide an opportunity to build or continue to develop an increasingly more
sophisticated understanding of hydrocarbon genesis in the basin. The data set makes
practical a novel strategy for the identification of potential new plays. Oils poorly
represented in the general data set can represent under-explored or under-exploited
petroleum systems, and provides a basis for the construction of more focused
exploration strategies for regions in which limited success has previously been enjoyed.
The different genetic oil families relate to variations in oil quality (e.g., %S, ppm
metals, API gravity) in various parts of the basin.
Oils believed to have been derived from Tertiary and
Cretaceous units usually possess geochemical characteristics associated with shale-rich
sources. Oils derived from Jurassic units more characteristically possess compositions
compatible with carbonate- or marl-rich sources. Tertiary sources occupy the coastal
region and "near" offshore of the Northern Rim, the Burgos Basin, and extend to
the offshore of the Tampico Basin of
Mexico
. Four major oil families comprise Tertiary
oils in the on- and offshore of the northern part of the
Gulf
o
Mexico
Basin. Distal
marine shale sediments in the Wilcox are the sources of the easternmost Tertiary oils.
Updip, lateral migration has been proposed to charge many of the reservoirs containing
oils derived from the Wilcox. An east to west shift occurs in the chemistry of Tertiary
oils and results from lateral facies changes from intervals containing deep-water marine
shales to intervals containing greater amounts of higher plant material deposited in more
proximal paralic to deltaic environments.
Oils
derived from Cretaceous sources most commonly occur in the northern part of the greater
Gulf
of
Mexico
Basin and adjacent offshore. Oils interpreted to have been derived from
Upper and Lower Cretaceous sources occur in the onshore Northern Rim. Oils associated with
the Lower Cretaceous occur sparingly onshore; however, oils that have compositions similar
to onshore Lower Cretaceous oils characterize the offshore, and oils having Upper
Cretaceous compositions are uncommon in the offshore. The western limits of Cretaceous
petroleum systems result from a number of phenomena. The onshore termination of oil-rich
Cretaceous petroleum systems reflects the transition in to the gas-prone Sabinas and
Burgos basins of northern
Mexico
. Oils attributed to Cretaceous sources occur from the
Texas offshore (High Island area) eastward to the Main Pass-Viosca Knoll areas of offshore
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The observed occurrence of Cretaceous oils in the
offshore extends farther east than the occurrence of oils associated with the Jurassic.
Oils believed to have been derived from Cretaceous sources are the main oil types observed
occurring east of Ewing Bank.
Jurassic-derived
oils occur in the Northern Rim (Oxfordian families), the southern Rim (Tithonian and
Oxfordian families), and in the offshore (probably Tithonian oils). Oils associated with
tithonian sources occur in all Mexican basins containing Mesozoic-derived oils. Oxfordian
oils apparently are more limited in their occurrence in
Mexico
, but have been identified
on the Campeche Shelf and from the southern part of the Reforma Block. Northern Rim
Jurassic Smackover oils (Oxfordian) consist of two major families. The observed occurrence
of oils having Smackover compositions abruptly ends near the western margin of the East
Texas Basin and the coast of Mississippi/Alabama.
Two
major compositional oil families occur in the shelf and deep-water areas of the northern
offshore
Gulf
of
Mexico
(Families SE1 and SE2). These families compositionally correlate
more closely to Jurassic oils from the Southern Rim than to Jurassic oils associated with
the Smackover. Oils obtained by piston core from surface seeps tend to have compositions
that are most closely correlative to oils from southeastern
Mexico
(Family SE2) and
occasionally occurs in wells. Compositional Family SE1 generally is found in shallower
shelf-slope areas and the oils in this family mostly come from wells. The seeps (Family
SE2) possibly represent relatively pristine samples of one of the sources for oils in the
offshore because of their similarity to Mexican source facies (end-member composition).
The "end-member" may be preserved in seeps because dispersive processes act to
minimizing mixing that characteristically occurs in reservoirs. Oils in Family SE1 can be
interpreted to be compositionally intermediate between Jurassic-derived oils
(carbonate-marl, Family SE2) and Cretaceous oils from shales. The Jurassic end-member of
the Family SE1 postulated mix is occasionally represented in wells. The Cretaceous
end-members may be represented in the High Island area of offshore Texas and along the
northern boundary of oils having mainly Jurassic chemistries.