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PSSalt
Geology and
Hydrocarbon
Plays in the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico*
Abu Chowdhury1
Search and Discovery Article #10215 (2009)
Posted November 10, 2009
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG Convention, Denver, Colorado, June 7-10, 2009. Please refer to closely related article by Abu Chowdhury and Laura Borton, 2007, Salt Geology and New Plays in Deep-Water Gulf of Mexico: Search and Discovery article #10132
1TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Company, Houston, TX ([email protected])
In the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico offshore, two pre-stack depth
migration projects were undertaken recently to better image the salt geology
and new plays. The Phase 46 survey area covers the eastern Mississippi canyon,
Main Pass and Viosca Knoll, and the western Destin Dome, Desoto Canyon and
northern Lloyd Ridge. P-49 survey is an infill of P-46 in the Desoto Canyon and
Lloyd Ridge. The surveys together comprise approximately 24,000 line miles of
2D seismic data. The surveys were pre-stack depth migrated and are currently
being used for a deep-water interpretation project integrating approximately
1100 wells, including 300 biostratigrahic wells. The pre-stack depth migrated
data identify major geologic sequence boundaries, associated depositional
units, salt features and various
hydrocarbon
plays. The autochthonous
Mid-Jurassic Louann (mother) salt, Upper Jurassic sediments and the overlying
Tertiary sequences are well manifested in the data sets. In the Mississippi
Canyon area to the west, the expanded Miocene play is characterized by broad
rollover structures created by the loading of sediments, deflation and
subsequent withdrawal of the mother salt. The Tertiary sections thin to the
east
as the basement ramps up towards the Florida Platform, at the expense of
Cretaceous and Jurassic Rocks that constitute the potential plays associated
with salt rollers and diapirs. The good imaging of the sedimentary section and
folded structure helps delineate the Tertiary and Mesozoic plays in the survey
area.
The pre-stack depth migrated data offers opportunities for
conducting detailed exploration including finding new plays below the proven
Miocene section in the Mississippi Canyon area. A new Wilcox play, the Wilcox
Paleocene-Eocene play west of Mississippi Canyon is yet to be tested in the
Mississippi Canyon. To the
east
, the Mesozoic Jurassic-Cretaceous plays have
been tested by some wells. Further
east
, the shelf edge and carbonate platform
areas offer opportunities for these plays as well as the carbonate and reef
plays as an extension of the onshore plays, e.g. Jurassic/Cretaceous Norphlet,
Smackover and Cotton Valley plays.
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Salt and sediment interactions play a major role in producing
reservoir rocks and traps for
The geology in the survey area (Figure 1)
varies from the deepwater Miocene expanded sections tested by many wells in
the eastern Mississsippi Canyon area to Mesozoic plays to the
The source rocks for the hydrocarbons in the Upper Jurassic, Cretaceous and Tertiary reservoirs in the eastern Gulf of Mexico is postulated to be Upper Jurassic Smackover lime mudstone (Mancini et al., 2008). The reservoir rocks are Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous Norphlet, Smackover, Haynesville, Cotton Valley, Hosston, and James Limestone/Sligo. These are continental, coastal, shallow and deep marine sands, and nearshore, marine shelf, ramp carbonates and reef facies.
Two seismic
pre-stack depth migrated data sets (Figure 1)
were used to better understand the salt and associated geology in the
deepwater and the carbonate shelf areas. Phase 46 and phase 49, the regional
2D projects, integrated approximately 1100 wells, including 300
biostratigraphic wells, in the interpretation of salt, regional geology and
The data sets are described below:
Methodology - Salt Interpretation and Pre-stack Depth Migration
The top and base of salt were mapped during the pre-stack depth migration process, which is outlined below:
To aid in picking top and base of salt, water bottom and top of salt multiples were calculated and mapped to discriminate primary salt reflections from multiple reflections. In addition, depth gathers were analyzed for flatness as a quality control.
Eight sequence boundaries, including the salt from the lower Pliocene down to the Mid- Jurassic, were also mapped to decipher the geology. The sequence boundaries were picked based on the integrated interpretation of biostratigrahic data, well log stacking patterns, and seismic reflection patterns.
The survey area is characterized by allocthonous salt in the west in the eastern Mississippi Canyon deep water area (Figure 1). The allochthonous salt ranges from diapiric bodies to regional Roho salt structures to thin welds.
Many of these salt features
are associated with a regional decollement surface. The thickness of the
majority of these salt structures varies from 0.2 km to 3 kms, and the ratio
of salt to sediment is approximately 30:70. Some salt bodies in Mississippi
Canyon in Thunder Horse area (Figure 4)
appear to be rooted and show thicknesses up to 8 km. Salt sediment
interaction during the Miocene created folded and turtle structures where
significant hydrocarbons have been trapped. The eastern part of the survey
area ramps up toward the carbonate shelf margin and platform to the
These geologic boundaries as shown on seismic sections (Figure 2, Figure 3) are abbreviated after their paleontological or formation associations. They represent geologic sections starting from Lower Pliocene (SA) down to Jurassic (JU). The seismic shows the carbonate platform, shelf edge and the deeper water geology from northeast to southwest. The salt varies from mostly autochthonous rollers and diapirs to allochthonous diapirs and canopies from northeast to southwest.
The geology presents a
variety of
Mesozoic
Jurassic-Cretaceous rocks are expanded to the
The
In the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico, the pre-stack depth migrated data offers opportunities for identifying new plays: Wilcox Paleocene-Eocence play in the Mississippi Canyon, and Jurassic/Cretaceous Norphlet/SmackOver and Cotton Valley plays in the Destin Dome and Desoto Canyon areas.
The author thanks TGSNOPEC for allowing presentation of this paper. I am grateful to Ray Martin and Jack Baker, senior consultants and Charlotte le Roy for their help in the interpretation of the project.
E. Mancini, E.A. Mancini, J. Obid, M. Badali, K. Liu, and W.C. Parcell, 2008, Sequence-stratigraphic analysis of Jurassic and Cretaceous strata and petroleum exploration in the central and eastern Gulf coastal plain, United States, AAPG Bulletin, v. 92(12), p. 1655 - 1686.
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