--> Abstract: Variation in Diapiric Structure Development and Productivity, Northern Gulf Coast Basin, by T. G. Fails; #91014 (1992).
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ABSTRACT: Variation in Diapiric Structure Development and Productivity, Northern Gulf Coast Basin

FAILS, THOMAS G., Consultant, Denver, CO

Paleogeologic (palinspastic) reconstructions of Previous HitsaltNext Hit Previous HitdomeNext Hit development are used to compare growth patterns and processes characteristic of different Previous HitsaltNext Hit Previous HitdomeNext Hit classes, to understand diapiric processes, and for Previous HitsaltNext Hit structure evaluation prior to drilling.

Coastal Previous HitSaltNext Hit basin diapiric structures [Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes and clay ("shale") domes] can be classified by the diapir top/objective section relationship (continental shelf sands and shales and sandy upper slope strata comprise the objective section): penetrant (or shallow piercement) Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes where Previous HitsaltNext Hit pierces the entire objective section and the overlying nonobjective alluvium; semipenetrant (or intermediate piercement) Previous HitsaltNext Hit domes where Previous HitsaltNext Hit pierces part of the objective section and arches the overlying beds, and nonpenetrant (or deep-seated) diapiric structures where the diapir (Previous HitsaltNext Hit, clay) is buried in upper slope shales beneath the arched objective section base.

Cross sections from 44 published Previous HitsaltNext Hit Previous HitdomeTop field studies were palinspastically restored to illustrate developmental patterns. They represent 15 penetrants, 8 semipenetrants, and 21 nonpenetrants. All fields are in the Eocene, Oligocene, Miocene, or Pliocene producing trends of southeast Texas and south Louisiana.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91014©1992 AAPG GCAGS and GC-SEPM Meeting, Jackson, Mississippi, October 21-23, 1992 (2009)