Seismic-
Stratigraphic
 Analysis of Miocene System, Offshore 
Texas--Models and Implications
W. C. Riese, W. A. Hill, R. N. Rosen
The application of traditional seismic-
stratigraphic
 models to the Miocene 
System offshore Texas was tested and found to be inadequate for the description 
of this section. Although the basic principles inherent to the application of 
seismic stratigraphy are useful, there are significant deviations from the model 
geometries of system tracts in the Miocene System. The most significant of these 
discrepancies is the apparent absence of lowstand wedges and shelf-margin 
wedges.
Problems with applying the traditional seismic 
stratigraphic
 models and 
geometries to the 
interpretation
 of this section have been recognized by others, 
and alternative ramp and growth-fault models have been suggested. These, too, 
appear to be inadequate for 
interpretation
 of this section: the ramp model fails 
to account adequately for outer neritic bathymetries in apparent outer-shelf 
settings during lowstands; the growth-fault model fails to adequately explain 
downthrown expansion of predominantly shale intervals.
The alternatives proposed postulate a fundamental difference in global, or at least basinal, water budgets for Miocene time relative to the Pleistocene or Holocene: eustatic levels in the Gulf of Mexico during the Miocene were apparently several hundred feet higher than during the Pleistocene and therefore erosion of the shelf during lowstands was minimal. We may also infer that surface gradients on the Texas shelf were steep during the Miocene and there was no pronounced continental shelf-slope break. Without such a break there is no steep surface against which to onlap the updip reaches of shelf-margin wedges or lowstand wedges, thus accounting for the absence of these geometries in our seismic data. This accounts for the presence of depositional fans in outer neritic, apparently shelfal settings during lowstands.
Expansion of shale-prone section downthrown to growth faults is accounted for 
by noting the proximity of what must have been a broad zone of 
structural
 
foundering on the outer shelf to cold, nutrient-rich, deep-basin waters. As sea 
levels rose during highstands to further transgress an already submerged shelf, 
upper bathyal ecozones were brought onto the "shelf," expanding the geographic 
limits of cold-water organisms. More critically, this brought nutrient-rich 
waters to a broader reach of photic-zone organisms. The proliferation of these 
organisms accounts for the expansion of shale-prone intervals along growth 
faults; these sections are enriched in fossil content.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91022©1989 AAPG Annual Convention, April 23-26, 1989, San Antonio, Texas.