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PSA
Sequence Stratigraphic
Framework
for the Lower Cretaceous North Carolina Coastal
Plain, Southeastern U.S.A
By
Richard Sunde1 and Brian P. Coffey2
Search and Discovery Article #50044 (2007)
Posted June 18, 2007
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG Annual convention, Long Beach, California, April 1-4, 2007.
1Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada ([email protected])
2Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada ([email protected])
A lithology-based sequence
stratigraphic
framework
for the little studied Lower Cretaceous mixed
carbonate-siliciclastic sediments of the subsurface Albemarle
Basin
is
presented. Thin sections produced of well cuttings from exploration wells were
analyzed to characterize lithology, fossil components, depositional facies, and
diagenetic events because the study interval is entirely confined to the deep
subsurface in a
basin
lacking core control. Data was then used in conjunction
with wireline logs to document the facies abundance and stacking patterns.
Integration of 2D seismic data and biostratigraphic control allowed regional
correlation of major transgressive-regressive events between wells, resulting in
the generation of a sequence stratigraphic
framework
for the onshore
basin
.
Results show the following dominant lithofacies (listed from shallow to deep): sandstone, skeletal sandstone; variably sandy mollusk packstone/grainstone; siltstone; unfossiliferous and diatomaceous shales; skeletal wackestone; variably sandy (quartz and glaucony) lime mudstone, and marl.
Comparison of observed facies
with cores and wireline logs from the Baltimore Canyon and Southeast Georgia
Embayment confirms the sequences consist of upward-shoaling siliciclastic
shorefaces, with basal-open shelf mollusk-rich carbonates often marking
transgressive events.
Basin
-scale depositional trends indicate greater
accumulation of the carbonate facies in the southern
basin
, with increased fine
siliciclastic material to the north. This trend may reflect a major
siliciclastic point-source in the vicinity of the ancestral Chesapeake region.
The depositional and diagenetic models generated from this research provide valuable insight into the facies and reservoir properties in coeval offshore units comprising frontier exploration targets along the Atlantic coast of the U.S. and Canada.
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The presence of wide, strike parallel facies belts suggests a high wave energy influence.
Two general stacking patterns have been recognized: Clastic-Dominated (usually the HST of the sequences): An early quartz-sandy, molluscan-skeletal packstone defines a transgressive lag. This is overlain by shales and siltstones grading up into sandstone representing a prograding shoreface. Bivalve (oyster) fragments are common, and the sequence is rarely capped by a coal layer. Carbonate-rich beds may represent winnowing of the sediment by tempestites or temporary clastic sedimentation hiatuses (short lived sea-level transgressions). Carbonate-Dominated (usually the TST of sequences): An early molluscan skeletal packstone defines a transgressive lag. This is overlain by a peloidal-rich packstone possessing variable amounts of marl, lime mud, and other skeletal fragments (un-abraded brachiopods, bryozoans, and rare echinoderms). This in turn is overlain by a mollusk packstone that likely represents sub-fair-weather wave-base rudist accumulations. The sequence is capped by a molluscan-ooid grainstone to packstone, miliolid packstone to wackestone, quartz-sandy lime mud, algal laminites, and rarely evaporates. This stacking pattern and lack of abundant encrusting allochems suggest a carbonate ramp depositional architecture. Clastic-rich beds may represent tempestite events, or temporary carbonate sedimentation hiatuses (short-lived sea-level regressions).
Detailed petrographic study of well cuttings from deep drilled wells (>1.5 km), integrated with geophysical logs analogous core, and seismic data can be used to produce detailed sedimentologic models and sequence stratigraphic frameworks.
Despite North Carolina’s tropical setting during the Lower Cretaceous, a significant portion of the studied sediments indicate depositional environments akin to clastic prograding shorefaces (bases are marked by mollusk-rich transgressive lags).
Intervals
dominated by carbonates most often occur during transgression, or in the
distal basinward portions of the
Brown, P.M.,
J.A. Miller, and F.M. Swain, 1972, Structural and stratigraphic
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