--> Abstract: Upper Jurassic Smackover Carbonate Petroleum System, Gulf of Mexico, USA, by E. A. Mancini; #90942 (1997).
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Abstract: Upper Jurassic Smackover Previous HitCarbonateNext Hit Petroleum System, Gulf of Mexico, USA

MANCINI, ERNEST A

The Upper Jurassic Smackover Previous HitFormationNext Hit is one of the most prolific hydrocarbon Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit reservoirs in the Gulf of Mexico. The Smackover represents a closed Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit petroleum system. Source rocks, reservoir rocks, and seal rocks are all contained within this unit. The Smackover petroleum trap is generally structural or combination involving favorable stratigraphy (depositional lithofacies, diagenetic facies, unconformities, or pinchouts on paleotopographic basement features) and salt anticlines, diapiric salt anticlines, or extensional fault traps associated with salt movement. The source potential of the lower Smackover Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit mudstones has been optimized by the combination of favorable conditions of deposition, Previous HitpreservationNext Hit, and subsequent burial and thermal histories. These mudstones are marine source rocks containing ample amounts of algal and algal-derived amorphous kerogens. Reservoir-grade Smackover Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit rocks include dolostones and leached and dolomitized packstones, grainstones, and boundstones. Previous HitPorosityNext Hit is facies-selective and is preserved in the high to moderate energy lithofacies of the upper part of the Smackover. Smackover diagenesis was dominated by the effects of early cementation, dissolution of Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit grains, and dolomitization. Previous HitPorosityNext Hit types include interparticulate, shelter, intercrystalline dolomite, grain moldic, and vuggy. Anhydrites of the uppermost Smackover and overlying Previous HitformationNext Hit commonly form a regional seal for the petroleum trap. An understanding of the complexities of the Smackover petroleum system is crucial to successful prospecting for and production of the hydrocarbons contained in these Previous HitcarbonateTop rocks.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90942©1997 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Vienna, Austria