Barremian platform carbonates from the eastern Vercors Massif, France; organization of depositional geometries
Barremian platform carbonates from the eastern Vercors Massif, France; organization of depositional geometries (in Special issue; outcrops that change the way we practice petroleum geology, Andrew Hurst (editor), Jeroen A. M. Kenter (editor) and S. Graham (editor))
AAPG Bulletin (April 2017) 101 (4): 485-493
- Alps
- Aptian
- Asia
- Barremian
- biostratigraphy
- carbonate platforms
- carbonate rocks
- Cenomanian
- Cretaceous
- Dauphine Alps
- deposition
- depositional environment
- diagenesis
- Europe
- France
- geometry
- limestone
- lithofacies
- lower Aptian
- Lower Cretaceous
- Mesozoic
- Middle East
- natural analogs
- outcrops
- paleogeography
- petroleum
- reservoir rocks
- reworking
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- sedimentation rates
- sequence stratigraphy
- shallow-water environment
- Shuaiba Formation
- three-dimensional models
- Turonian
- Upper Cretaceous
- Urgonian
- Vercors
- Western Alps
- Western Europe
- southeastern France
- southern France
- Mishrif Formation
- Glandasse Plateau
- La Montagnette Massif
The Vercors Massif of southern France constitutes a world-class and unique opportunity to visualize depositional geometries and diagenetic transformations of a Barremian-early Aptian (early Cretaceous) carbonate system, the Urgonian platform, at a seismic scale and thus to constrain the three-dimensional continuity and connectivity of reservoir-prone facies deposited during periods of high and low sea level. The integration of detailed outcrop analysis, including diagenetic transformations, with the sequence stratigraphic interpretation of cliff provides opportunities to study the precise relationship between sea level changes and facies distribution, including reservoir-prone examples such as slope and fan deposits, to understand how local tectonics affect accommodation space and effects on sedimentation rates. This integrated stratigraphic framework developed at surface conditions provides an analog for major petroleum systems of the Middle East where platform carbonates are involved, such as the Aptian Shu'aiba or the Cenomanian-Turonian Mishrif Formation.