REDUCTION PROCEDURES AND IMPLICATIONS OF A HIGH-RESOLUTION GRAVITY TRAVERSE IN THE BROOKS RANGE FOOTHILLS, ALASKA
BROWN, Philip J. II1,
SALTUS, Richard W.1, PEAPPLES,
Paige R.2, SWENSON, Robert F.2,
DUNCAN, Alec S.3, and WALLACE,
Wesley K.3, (1)
Crustal
Imaging
and Characterization Team, U. S. Geological Survey, DFC, PO Box 25046, MS 964,
Denver, CO 80225-0046, [email protected], (2) Alaska Division of Geologic and
Geophysical Surveys, 3354 College Road, Fairbanks, AK 99709, (3) Department of
Geology and Geophysics, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775
Understanding the structural transition between the Brooks Range and the
North Slope coastal plain of Alaska is critical to hydrocarbon assessment in the
region. We are studying this transition in the Chandler Lake Quadrangle just
north of Anaktuvuk Pass. Surface exposures along Tiglukpuk Creek and Siksikpuk
River provide important constraints on structural models. To the south,
Mississippian carbonates to Triassic siliciclastic rocks form the Endicott
Mountains Allochthon (EMA). The EMA is overlain by rocks previously assigned to
the Ipnavik River Allochothon (IRA), including Cretaceous turbidites of the
Okpikruak Formation that commonly contain blocks of diverse Mississippian to
Cretaceous rocks. Structurally, these allochthons are in stacked thrust sheets
that are folded in surface exposures to the south. Cretaceous shale, sand, and
conglomerate of the Fortress Mountain, Torok and Nanushuk Formations are present
atop the EMA thrust sheets to the north. Hydrocarbon potential in the area
depends upon the thickness and
structure
of these overlying siliciclastic units
and the geometry and northward extent of the underlying EMA and IRA wedge.
We collected high-resolution gravity data to assist with structural modeling along this transect. Since the modest geophysical and petrophysical data available in the area suggest little density contrast between the various geologic units, great care was taken during gravity data acquisition and processing to minimize uncertainty and to allow differentiation of the subtle density variations in the subsurface. Elevation was controlled by a survey-grade Differential Global Positioning System (DGPS) and post-processing of the DGPS data reports less than a 3 cm error in height. Relative gravity measurements with a 500 m station separation were made using three different gravity meters so that the amount of instrument error associated with each station could be determined. Constraints were placed on the gravity modeling based upon surface sample and outcrop data, seismic horizon picks and well log data. Preliminary models suggest that the IRA and EMA extend significantly farther north than they are mapped at the surface. This result has implications for the extent of possible hydrocarbon (gas-prone) reservoir structures within the central North Slope foothills belt.