REANALYSIS OF GRAVITY DATA FOR THE ARCTIC NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE, NORTHEASTERN ALASKA
PHILLIPS, Jeffrey D.1, POTTER, Christopher J.2, and SALTUS, Richard W.1, (1) U.S. Geol Survey, Mail Stop 964 - Box 25046, Denver Federal Center, Denver, CO 80225-0046, [email protected], (2) U.S. Geological Survey, Mail Stop 939, Denver Federal Center, Denver, CO 80225-0046
A reexamination of the gravity field for the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska, using a complete, proprietary data set and trend-enhanced gridding, will contribute to a new structural interpretation. Previous interpretations based on incomplete gravity data, aeromagnetic data, and seismic reflection profiles were used to estimate the size and volume of possible oil-bearing structures and the extent of shallow faulting.
Proprietary gravity data located at approximately 250 m intervals along
seismic lines spaced approximately 5 km apart were gridded using a
bi-directional algorithm with enhancement along the N65°E trend of the largest
known shallow structure, the Marsh Creek anticline. The trend-enhanced gridding
improves resolution of short-wavelength features parallel to the trend
direction. The gridded data were bandpass-filtered based on a power-spectral
model consisting of three equivalent density layers – a shallow thin
layer
, an
intermediate-depth thin
layer
, and a deeper half-space. The short-wavelength
anomalies produced by the shallow
layer
most likely represent the densities of
the folded and faulted sedimentary beds truncated at the Pleistocene erosion
surface.
The intermediate-wavelength anomalies produced by the middle
layer
most
likely represent the density variations produced by the shallow anticlines,
synclines, and thrust faults. Due to compaction, density should generally
increase with depth within the sedimentary section. This implies that the cores
of anticlines should be of higher density than the cores of synclines, and that
anticlines should produce gravity highs and synclines should produce gravity
lows. In the intermediate-bandpass data, this relationship holds for the Marsh
Creek anticline, but the opposite relationship is found for one anticline, the
Aichilik high, which likely has a mudstone-rich core. Increasing density with
depth also implies that thrust faults should exhibit gravity highs over their
hanging walls.
The long-wavelength anomalies produced by the deep equivalent half-space are
interpreted to be the combined
effects
of the basin thickness and the basement
density variations. Separating these two
effects
could lead to identification of
basement structures representing deeper exploration targets.