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Deltaic Deposits and Linked Downslope Petroleum Systems*
By
Harry H. Roberts1 and Richard H. Fillon2
Search and Discovery Article #40149 (2005)
Posted April 3, 2005
*Adapted from extended abstract, prepared by the author for presentation at AAPG International Conference & Exhibition, Cancun, Mexico, October 24-27, 2004.
1Coastal Studies Institute, 304 Howe-Russell Geoscience Complex, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803-7257 ([email protected])
2Earth Studies Associate, 3730 rue Nichole, New Orleans, LA 70131 ([email protected])
Introduction
Deltas in
siliciclastic and mixed carbonate – siliciclastic deposystems are key to
understanding processes that transfer terrigenous detritus from continental
uplands to deep-ocean environments. The Lagniappe Delta deposystem (Figure
1) located on the shelf and
slope
in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico has
characteristics that make it a useful laboratory for developing petroleum system
insights.
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Geologic SettingDuring the last 100 ka glacio-eustatic cycle, delta lobes fed by southern Appalachian rivers with relatively high sand-to-mud ratios, prograded rapidly across a broad shelf, reaching the shelf-edge only about 1000 years before the maximum lowstand. Offset stacking of delta lobes at the shelf-edge is responsible for facies heterogeneity and is of importance in predicting sediment bypass to deep-water reservoir systems.
Lagniappe Clinoforms
Thick sandy Lagniappe clinoforms constructed at the shelf-edge are
excellent analogs for the growth-fault-related hydrocarbon reservoirs in
the Gulf of Mexico and other petroleum basins. A strongly laminated
prodelta apron, constructed on the upper Delta-front clinoforms often exhibit strong acoustic impedance contrasts suggesting the presence of bubble-phase gas. Because growth faults and salt structures commonly coexist with shelf-edge deltas, they may offer the migration linkage between deep hydrocarbon systems and the lateral migration pathways provided by distal clinoforms that are directly linked to deltaic reservoirs. Thin fine sand, silt, and clay laminae in the prodelta apron create effective capillary seals that inhibit vertical hydrocarbon migration while allowing hydrocarbons to move laterally updip within coarser laminae. Gas presently seeping from truncated clinoform sets and anomalous d18O and d13C values of authigenic carbonates within sediments of the clinoform packages strongly suggest that hydrocarbon migration is an on-going process.
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