Depositional
Systems and Seismic Facies
Analysis
of Cooper, Llano and Habanero Fields,
Garden Banks, Central Gulf of Mexico Slope
KUBIK, PETER K., Southern Methodist University, Dallas Texas
Exploration and development wells, for three deepwater central Gulf of Mexico fields
(Cooper, Llano, and Habanero), provide time-equivalent stratigraphy from proximal to
distal
depositional
settings. Each field is located in the central Gulf of Mexico
salt-minibasins intraslope province. Oil and gas pays for each of the fields are Pliocene
and Pleistocene turbidite deposits. Using condensed section micro-faunal assemblages from
three wells, six glacio-eustatic cycles have been identified to occur during the Pliocene
(Discoaster brouweri through Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilica intervals 3.64 Ma – 1.95
Ma). Interpretation of a high-quality 3D geophysical survey (encompassing 8 lease blocks
or 75 square miles) allows a study of ancient turbidite processes and salt diapirism
within a salt mini-basin province. Geological subsurface field mapping will show how
accommodation and sedimentation was dependent upon salt-sediment interaction through time.
Salt diapir evolution will be chronostratigraphically documented by interpreting
sequence
stratigraphic stacking patterns and the sediment facies
depositional
architecture.
Preliminary geological mapping indicates a vertical
sequence
stratigraphic succession of
turbidite lithofacies from basal sheet sands (ponded assemblage) to overlying channel
sands (bypass assemblage).