Exploration risk reduction: An AVO analysis in the offshore Middle Miocene, Central Gulf of Mexico

2000 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc L. Sbar
2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Liu ◽  
Richard Brian Dessenberger ◽  
Ken McMillen ◽  
Joseph R. Lach ◽  
Mohan Gajanan Kelkar

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 356-372
Author(s):  
Miriam E. Katz ◽  
Kenneth G. Miller ◽  
Michael A. Kaminski ◽  
James V. Browning

Abstract We document Neogene benthic foraminiferal biofacies changes on a depth transect of six Gulf of Mexico industry wells (sidewall and cutting samples) that is oblique to the coast and extends from Main Pass to Green Canyon (offshore Alabama to Louisiana, USA). Calcareous nannofossil and planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphic control provides the framework to make interwell comparisons of the benthic foraminiferal biofacies; these comparisons provide the basis for paleobathymetric and paleoenvironmental interpretations and to identify useful benthic foraminiferal biostratigraphic markers in this region. Benthic foraminiferal faunas indicate that Neogene paleodepths were slightly shallower at the eastern wells and deepened towards the western wells. Calcareous benthic foraminiferal biofacies dominated by Uvigerina spp. indicate that paleoenvironments characterized by low-oxygen conditions and/or high productivity occurred periodically during deposition along the transect. This is supported by repeated occurrences of a distinctive assemblage of agglutinated foraminifera (known as the “Agua Salada Fauna”) that is typical of dysaerobic environments. Evidence of intensified low-oxygen/high-productivity environments are recorded in lowermost Middle Miocene sediments at some locations and are present at all wells in Upper Miocene deposits. In Upper Miocene-Pliocene sediments, oxygen levels appear to have been related to paleodepth, indicating that the development of lower oxygen conditions was the result of an expansion or migration of the oxygen minimum zone. Our results are consistent with a global cause for the expansion of the oxygen minumum zone during the Late Miocene and widespread increase in export production. Our study shows that despite problems in well cuttings (cavings, inconsistent sampling) and complications in regional salt and fault tectonics, well transects can provide coherent benthic foraminiferal biofacies patterns that reveal paleobathymetric and paleoenvironmental changes in the Gulf of Mexico.


1969 ◽  
Vol 43 (S3) ◽  
pp. 1-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas R. Waller

The living members of the Argopecten gibbus stock include the bay and calico scallops, Argopecten irradians (Lamarck) and A. gibbus (Linné), both common in the western Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico; the less common A. nucleus (Born) of the Caribbean, southern Gulf of Mexico, Antilles, and southeastern Florida; and the common A. circularis (Sowerby) and A. purpuratus (Lamarck) of the eastern Pacific. The fossil members of the stock include the ancestors of these living species together with Argopecten eboreus (Conrad), an extinct species or species-group not ancestral to any of the later taxa. This study seeks to determine evolutionary relationships within the Argopecten gibbus stock by working back through the fossil record from a model of the morphological and ecological relationships of living species and subspecies. Biologically, the study is limited to an analysis of the morphology and ecology of the living taxa deduced from population samples. Paleontologically, it is limited to an analysis of morphological variation among samples of fossil populations collected from upper Cenozoic strata (Alum Bluff Group of the middle Miocene through the Pleistocene) exposed on the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains of the United States. The time span investigated is about 18 million years, according to the latest published scale of absolute time.Differences between samples were studied and evaluated by means of morphometric data consisting of 70 measurements and form ratios of the outline, ligamenture, and musculature of each valve. Using an electronic digital computer, data were subjected to univariate and bivariate analyses, and samples were compared using machine-plotted, bivariate scatter diagrams, reduced major axes, and other graphical techniques. Data from right and left valves were treated separately, except that they were recombined in the study of characters that differ between valves, thereby furnishing new information on intervalve features.The postulated phylogeny shows a poorly known species, Argopecten species b, in the early middle Miocene (Oak Grove Sand), that is apparently very near the origin of the stock. This species evolved phyletically through A. nicholsi (Gardner) of the Shoal River Formation and A. choctawhatcheensis (Mansfield) of the Arca Faunizone into A. comparilis (Tuomey & Holmes) of the upper Miocene (Tamiami, Pinecrest, Duplin, and Yorktown Formations). A. comparilis was apparently broadly adapted and widely distributed, living in bays, sounds, and open marine waters in the western Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean and probably extending through seaway passages to the Pacific, where it gave rise phyletically to A. circularis. By the end of the Miocene, on the eastern side of the Americas, this variable species had split, giving rise to a primitive bay scallop, A. anteamplicostatus (Mansfield), that, like the living bay scallop (its phyletic descendant), was probably ecologically restricted to the semienclosed waters of bays and sounds, and to another species, A. vicenarius (Conrad), probably restricted to open marine waters like the living calico scallop. The primitive bay scallop was apparently unable to reach the Pacific, but the open-marine species seems to have given rise to both the Pacific A. purpuratus and the Atlantic calico scallop, A. gibbus. The living Pacific A. circularis is morphologically primitive in that it resembles the Miocene species A. comparilis more than it does any of the later species on the eastern side of the Americas and is ecologically primitive in that it is broadly adapted and able to live both in bays and sounds and in open marine waters. During the Pleistocene, A. nucleus, a tropical bay scallop, is inferred to have split from A. gibbus and to have become morphologically convergent on the true bay scallop, A. irradians. A. eboreus, a common scallop on the eastern side of the Americas in the Miocene and Pliocene, represents a highly variable yet morphologically persistent lineage that neither split nor gave rise phyletically to other species and that became extinct during the early Pleistocene. In certain features of morphology, the A. gibbus lineage is convergent on the A. eboreus lineage, indicating that the extinct species may also have been restricted to open marine waters.On the basis of the materials analyzed thus far, the evolution (both phyletic change and splitting) of the stock has been faster on the Atlantic side of the Americas than on the Pacific side, with the living Pacific species resembling late Miocene and early Pliocene Atlantic species. Because barrier islands seem to have played a key role in speciation within the stock, it would appear that evolutionary differences may have been caused by the active coastal tectonism of the Pacific side destroying such island barriers before genetic differences between inshore and offshore scallop populations could arise.With regard to nomenclature, the name Argopecten is shown to be a senior synonym of Plagioctenium; the generic name Aequipecten is rejected for American species related to Argopecten gibbus; and it is concluded that the generic name Chlamys, sensu lato, is better applied as the subfamily name Chlamydinae. The species name Argopecten vicenarius (Conrad), unused since 1898, is reinstated as the only available name for an important taxon occurring in the Caloosahatchee Marl of Florida and the Waccamaw Formation of the Carolinas.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola Flórez ◽  
Paula Andrea Zapata-Ramírez ◽  
Carlos Jaramillo ◽  
James S Klaus

Here we describe and illustrate 31 Miocene corals species from the Siamaná and Jimol Formations that were collected over two expeditions in the Guajira basin, Colombia during 2011 and 2014. Corals include 25 species, derived from 15 different genera and 12 families. Six of them remain with open nomenclature. From the 25 species found in the study area, 88% are extinct and the remaining under endanger status. Most of the species are hermatypic components of the Scleractinian order, with the exception of a member of the Milleporidae family. The corals described are composed of typical taxa from the Oligocene-Miocene transition, during which they were important components in building fringing and patch reefs in the circum-Caribbean/Gulf of Mexico region. The presence of typical Oligocene coral taxa such as Agathiphyllia spp., Antiguastrea sp., and Diploastrea spp. from La Guajira extend the distribution of these genera into the Miocene, adding a more recent geological presence in the Southern Caribbean. Coral assemblages suggest a development in clear, calm and shallow waters, under oligotrophic conditions and only moderate physical disturbance. Our descriptions represent the first effort to characterize the taxonomy of fossilized corals in Colombia.


2015 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-24
Author(s):  
Suliantara Suliantara ◽  
Tri Muji Susantoro

Tolo Bay is located between East Arm and Southeast Arm Sulawesi, reaching a water depth of up to 3500 meters below sea level. Regionally, this block is situated within Banggai Basin where some gas and oil fi elds are already in production. The closest fi eld is Tiaka Oil Field located about 125 kilometers northwest of the study area. A geo-science review has been conducted to clarify the potential existence of hydrocarbon in this block. Based on previous reports, papers, and subsurface data from the Directorate General of Oil and Gas, the study area is located within the collision area between Banggai-Sula Microcontinent and Sulawesi. This collision occurred during Late Creataceous and Middle Miocene periods. During drifting phase a sedimentation process occurred at the front of the Banggai-Sula Microcontinent. This sediment is potentially source rock and reservoir rock. Meanwhile, during the drifting phase the study area is interpreted as located at the southern part of Banggai-Sula Microcontinent. This different tectonic setting will impact on the type of sedimentary rock, hence source rock and reservoir rock occurrence in the study area is still unclear. As source rock and reservoir rock within the study area are unclear, hydrocarbon explorations will be very risky. In order to reduce exploration risk, it is proposed to conduct geological and geophysical studies using the latest seismic data that was surveyed by PT. TGS – NOPEC and PT. ECI – PGS.


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