--> Fracture/Fault Pattern Delineation in Gulf of Mexico, by Rao Yalamanchili; #90052 (2006)
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Fracture/Previous HitFaultNext Hit Pattern Delineation in Gulf of Mexico

Rao Yalamanchili
Fugro Robertson Inc, Houston, TX

Fracture/Previous HitFaultNext Hit pattern maps are one of the tools useful for explorationists to locate Previous HithydrocarbonNext Hit prospects. Depth and lineament maps are generated from gravity and magnetic data on a regional scale using Euler deconvolution technique. Based on this study, it appears that the Euler depth maps are good at revealing the boundaries of major geological provinces and the lineament maps are good at identifying the fracture/Previous HitfaultNext Hit trends. The mapped lineaments define all classes of fracture/Previous HitfaultNext Hit patterns in the western Gulf of Mexico region. The dominant trends in the lineament maps show approximately NE-SW and NW-SE directions. Some of these northwest-southeast trends are well correlated with the Matagorda, Galveston, Brazos and Sabine transfer faults. Character changes in Previous HitfaultNext Hit structure and stratigraphy are evident across transfer faults. These transfer faults Previous HitcontrolNext Hit the Previous HitdistributionNext Hit of shale and salt basins as well as the Previous HithydrocarbonNext Hit bearing basins in the Gulf of Mexico region. The mapped lineaments in the shelf area correlate with the Miocene faults, which are parallel to the synrift basement graben structure. These faults also serve as conduits for the migration of hydrocarbons into shallower reservoirs. As several of the mapped lineaments correlate with published geological Previous HitfaultNext Hit trends, the other lineaments may be indicators of new insights in this area. Some of these Previous HitfaultNext Hit trends may very well represent the structural and stratigraphic discontinuities in the geologic horizons. The mapped lineaments may either reflect the nature of the underlying crustal and synrift structures and/or the overlying the sediments. Since Previous HithydrocarbonNext Hit production in the Gulf of Mexico shelf and slope basinal areas are closely associated with the locations of the transfer faults, the mapped fracture/Previous HitfaultNext Hit trends may reveal some new insights for Previous HithydrocarbonTop plays.