Lithofacies and Stratigraphy of the Lisburne and Etivluk Groups in the Lisburne 1 Well and Adjacent Outcrops, Central Brooks Range, Alaska
By
J.A. Dumoulin and K.J. Bird (U.S. Geological Survey)
The Lisburne 1 well in the thrust belt of the central
Brooks Range penetrated 17,000 ft of imbricated, chiefly Ellesmerian sequence
strata in the Endicott Mountains allochthon. Five thrust repeats of the Lisburne
Group (Carboniferous) and overlying Etivluk Group (Permian-Jurassic) were
drilled. Lithofacies analyses of >350 thin sections of cores and cuttings, and
biostratigraphy based on foraminifers and conodonts, allow detailed correlation
with coeval units in adjacent outcrops and provide data on the depositional
setting and reservoir and source rock potential of these strata. The late Early-
Late Mississippian (Osagean-Chesterian) Lisburne Group consists mainly of
skeletal wackestone to grainstone, locally completely dolomitized. An interval
of abundant glauconite and detrital quartz in the lower Lisburne may mark a
sequence-bounding unconformity. Dolostone in the upper part of the unit has
maximum porosities of 10–13% and common residual hydrocarbons. The uppermost
Lisburne is thinly interbedded mudstone, chert, and shale that are locally
dolomitic,
phosphatic
, spiculitic, and organic-rich; conodonts from this
interval in outcrop represent an outer shelf to slope biofacies. The Etivluk
Group here encompasses the Siksikpuk and Otuk Formations. The Siksikpuk is
mainly varicolored shale and radiolarian chert, with a basal interval of
glauconitic, pyritic sandstone.
Phosphatic
and organic-rich shale, radiolarian
chert, and pelecypod coquinas make up the Otuk. Outcrop and subsurface data
indicate that the Lisburne Group in this area accumulated near the seaward
margin of a shallow-water carbonate platform that drowned during the Late
Mississippian; outer shelf or deeper conditions predominated throughout
deposition of the upper Lisburne and the Etivluk Group.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.