Sequence Stratigraphy of the Ferry Lake
Anhydrite
Northeastern Gulf of Mexico: Implications for Hydrocarbon Potential
Faith O. Amadi
Department of Geology and Geological Engineering, University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677-1848, [email protected]
The Lower Cretaceous Ferry Lake
Anhydrite
in southern Mississippi is composed
of approximately 76 meters (250 feet) of alternating carbonate and evaporite beds.
Correlations of well logs indicate rhythmic depositional stacking of carbonate and
anhydrite
facies. Identification of these small-scale transgressive-regressive cycles,
which formed during high-frequency eustatic sea-level fluctuations, is based on stratal
geometry, nature of cycle boundaries, and facies stacking patterns. The Ferry Lake
sequence is divided into nine high-frequency, fourth-order parasequences at the
southern edge of the Mississippi Interior Salt Basin, and seven high-frequency, fourthorder
cycle sets (FLP-1 to FLP-7) approximately 120 kilometers south of the southern
rim. Fewer parasequences in the seaward direction result from pinchouts of evaporite
beds and interfingering of evaporates with carbonate beds.
Analysis of a carbonate sample from 4,084 meters (13,398 feet) yielded 1.0% total organic carbon, vitrinite reflectance of 0.88%, and Tmax of 437 oC. These results indicate that the Ferry Lake is thermally mature and has hydrocarbon generative potential.
Parasequence stacking patterns suggest that the late stage highstand systems
tracts, which are composed of evaporite beds, were deposited during a relative drop in
sea level, and the transgressive systems tracts, composed of backstepping carbonate
beds, were deposited during a minor relative sea-level rise. Classifying individual
carbonate and
anhydrite
beds into high frequency, fourth-order parasequences provides
understanding of reservoir, source , and seal distributions at the play and prospect
scale.
AAPG Search and Discover Article #90087 © 2008 AAPG/SEG Student Expo, Houston, Texas