Update search
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
NARROW
Format
Article Type
Journal
Publisher
GeoRef Subject
-
all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Icy Bay (1)
-
Middleton Island (1)
-
Pacific Ocean
-
East Pacific
-
Northeast Pacific
-
Gulf of Alaska (1)
-
-
-
North Pacific
-
Northeast Pacific
-
Gulf of Alaska (1)
-
-
-
-
South America
-
Brazil
-
Mato Grosso Brazil (1)
-
Parana Brazil (1)
-
Sao Paulo Brazil (1)
-
-
Parana Basin (1)
-
-
-
fossils
-
Invertebrata
-
Protista
-
Foraminifera (1)
-
-
-
microfossils (1)
-
-
geologic age
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Pleistocene (1)
-
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Miocene (1)
-
-
-
Yakataga Formation (1)
-
-
Paleozoic
-
Itarare Subgroup (1)
-
upper Paleozoic (1)
-
-
-
Primary terms
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Pleistocene (1)
-
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Miocene (1)
-
-
-
Yakataga Formation (1)
-
-
continental drift (1)
-
faults (2)
-
folds (1)
-
glacial geology (1)
-
Invertebrata
-
Protista
-
Foraminifera (1)
-
-
-
Pacific Ocean
-
East Pacific
-
Northeast Pacific
-
Gulf of Alaska (1)
-
-
-
North Pacific
-
Northeast Pacific
-
Gulf of Alaska (1)
-
-
-
-
paleogeography (1)
-
Paleozoic
-
Itarare Subgroup (1)
-
upper Paleozoic (1)
-
-
plate tectonics (1)
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
diamictite (1)
-
-
-
sedimentation (2)
-
South America
-
Brazil
-
Mato Grosso Brazil (1)
-
Parana Brazil (1)
-
Sao Paulo Brazil (1)
-
-
Parana Basin (1)
-
-
stratigraphy (1)
-
-
sedimentary rocks
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
diamictite (1)
-
-
-
GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Hydrocarbon-Bearing Late Paleozoic Glaciated Basins of Southern and Central South America Available to Purchase
Abstract Although glaciated basins are usually associated with nonproductive, poorly sorted strata, hydrocarbons occur in several late Paleozoic glaciated basins of central and southern South America. In Bolivia, the Chaco-Tarija basin has commercial production from more than 30 fields in glacially influenced submarine channel systems (Palmar, Santa Cruz, and Bermejo fields) that accounts for about 60% of current national reserves. Correlative deposits in Argentina host the Campo Duran and Madrejones oil fields. In Brazil, the Paraná basin has significant but as yet subcommercial gas shows in thick marine turbidite sandstones of the glacially influenced Itararé Group. The Chaco-Paraná basin of Argentina is one of the largest onshore targets for exploration in South America, but it is virtually untested. Glacially influenced foreland basins of Argentina (Tepuel and Paganzo-Maliman) contain complex glacigenic stratigraphies of interbedded tillites and poorly prospective sandstones. In contrast, the glacially influenced marine infills of intracratonic basins in Brazil (Paraná), Bolivia, and Argentina (Chaco-Tarija and Chaco-Paraná) contain thick sequences of pebbly mudstones and regionally extensive reservoir quality sandstones. The key to the occurrence of good reservoirs and associated trapping mechanisms in these intracratonic basins is the interplay of sediment supply, regional tectonics, and relative sea level changes. Glacial scouring of extensive cratons by ice sheets resulted in the delivery of huge volumes of glaciofluvial sand to deltas. Structural control of drainage patterns on the craton by basement lineaments resulted in persistent sediment sources and depocenters. Frequent earthquake activity along reactivated basement lineaments resulted in downslope mass flow of deltaic sediments and the deposition of thick, amalgamated sand turbidites (reservoirs). Pebbly mudstone seals most likely record higher relative sea levels, resulting from basin subsidence, and deposition from suspended sediment plumes and icebergs. Source rocks are provided by Devonian and Permian shales. This model may be applicable to other parts of Gondwana that contain thick, prospective sandstones in glacially influenced intracratonic basins.
Glacial geologic confirmation of an intraplate boundary, in the Paraná basin of Brazil Available to Purchase
The Yakataga Formation; A late Miocene to Pleistocene record of temperate glacial marine sedimentation in the Gulf of Alaska Available to Purchase
Coastal mountains in the northeastern Gulf of Alaska expose continuous, along-strike sections over many tens of kilometers through the 5-km-thick infill (Yakataga Formation) of a glacially influenced active margin basin. The basin has been thrust and uplifted as a result of continuing compression between the underlying Pacific and North American plates. The Yakataga Formation is the best exposed and most complete late Cenozoic record of cool temperate and glacially influenced marine sedimentation in the world. Glacial marine sedimentation began during the late Miocene and is recorded in lowermost Yakataga strata exposed at Yakataga Reef by the abrupt arrival in a deep basin of turbidites and chaotically bedded debris flows. Debris flows, as much as 19 m thick are composed largely of glacial debris brought down to sea level by tidewater glaciers. A depositional setting characterized by a narrow shelf terminating in a steep slope and deep water, and subject to frequent downslope mass flow events is indicated. Overlying Yakataga strata exposed at Icy Bay are characterized by interbedded turbidites, diamictites, and shallow marine sandstones; these facies probably record progradation of a continental slope by mass flow processes in response to high rates of sediment supply from glaciers draining rapidly uplifting (1 to 10 m/yr) and eroding coastal mountains, and earthquake activity. Seismic and outcrop data show that the slope experienced multiple episodes of syndepositional compressional folding, resulting in a pronounced structural influence on sedimentation style. Uppermost Yakataga strata exposed on Middleton Island are dominated by thick “rain-out” diamictites resulting from iceberg transport of coarser debris and the deposition of muds from suspended sediment plumes in an outer shelf setting. Graded gravel facies record the infilling of submarine channels similar to the valleys that traverse the modern Gulf of Alaska shelf; coquinas indicate episodic sediment starvation. Boulder pavements record repeated surge-like ice advances to the outer continental shelf. By this time (late Pliocene to Pleistocene) a low-relief subsiding shelf was established in the Gulf of Alaska on which a high-resolution record of sea-level change, tectonism, and glaciation was preserved; deposition rates may have been as high as 10 m/ky. The single most important influence on sedimentation in the late Miocene to Pleistocene Gulf of Alaska, especially in allowing the preservation of a thick active margin basin fill in a compressional tectonic setting, has been, and continues to be, the abundant production of meltwater from temperate tidewater glaciers and associated sediment from rapidly uplifting (10 m/ky) coastal mountains.