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Santa Margarita Member

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Series: Guidebook
Published: 01 January 2001
DOI: 10.32375/2001-GB75.9
EISBN: 9781732014855
... The upper Miocene Potter sandstone reservoir of the Santa Margarita member of the Monterey Formation was deposited in deep water as a coalesced turbidite fan along the west flank of the present day San Joaquin Valley. Contributing over 35 percent of the cumulative production of the giant Midway...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (7): 1081.
... in California, either in age, thickness, or completeness. A few miles east of the type section, the shale and diatomite members of the Monterey Formation begin to interfinger with the Santa Margarita Formation and the entire Miocene section grades into sandstone against the Sierra de Salinas. Overlapping...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (2): 429.
... mollusks restricted to the “Temblor Stage.” Mollusks from the Santa Margarita Formation in the southwest part of the range are referable to the “Margaritan Stage,” stratigraphically higher assemblages from this formation are referable to the “Jacalitos Stage.” Pectinids (Aequipecten, Lyropecten, Pecten s.s...
Image
Figure  2. Stratigraphic columns containing fossil  Crassostrea  beds. A,  ...
Published: 01 January 2001
Figure 2. Stratigraphic columns containing fossil Crassostrea beds. A, C. titan in the upper Miocene Santa Margarita Formation, Pine Mountain, California (Miocene-1). B, C. titan in the upper Miocene Santa Margarita Formation, Coalinga Anticline, California (Miocene-2). C, C. virginica
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1953
AAPG Bulletin (1953) 37 (1): 189.
... the eastern continental equivalent of the Bitter Creek and Monterey formations; Santa Margarita formation, upper Miocene and its continental equivalent on the east, the Quatal formation; and the Morales formation, continental PIiocene(?). The time-stratigraphic sequence of some of these rock units can...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (7): 1084.
..., amplify the log. A regional surface map and a subsurface contour map on the Santa Margarita Formation are included as fold-ins. © 1965 American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved 1965 American Association of Petroleum Geologists ...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1955
AAPG Bulletin (1955) 39 (1): 140.
... from the East-side Chanac-Santa Margarita series by a shale barrier. © 1955 American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved 1955 American Association of Petroleum Geologists ...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (12): 2633.
... for the siltstone member underlying the Santa Margarita sand and overlying the Lombardi sand. The name Aurignac silt is proposed for the siltstone separating the Lombardi and Aurignac sands. © 1951 American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved 1951 American Association of Petroleum...
Image
Lithologic facies maps used for each layer in the basin and petroleum syste...
Published: 15 June 2019
) Saucesian Sandholdt Member (Mbr); (C) Relizian Sandholdt Mbr; (D) Luisian Sandholdt Mbr; (E) Mohnian Hames Mbr; (F) Delmontian Hames Mbr and Santa Margarita Sandstone; (G) Pancho Rico Fm; (H) Paso Robles Fm.
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1942
AAPG Bulletin (1942) 26 (10): 1608–1631.
... infolded with, younger Miocene sediments. This landslid mass descended by gravity, in upper Miocene time, from a highland located within or west of the San Andreas Fault zone, prior to the deposition of the Santa Margarita (upper Miocene). During Santa Margarita time coarse clastics derived from...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Image
Cross section of Salinas Basin stratigraphy. Numbers correspond to the foll...
Published: 15 June 2019
of Monterey Formation; Mmsm = upper Monterey Formation shallow marine facies, including Santa Margarita sandstone; Ob = Berry Formation; OMvq = Vaqueros Formation; Ppr = Pancho Rico Formation; QPp = Paso Robles Formation; RF = Rinconada Fault; SAF = San Andreas Fault.
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1939
AAPG Bulletin (1939) 23 (1): 45–81.
..., Pleistocene, and Recent age. The Miocene is the oil-producing portion of the section. It consists of the Upper Miocene Santa Margarita(?) formation and the Middle Miocene Monterey formation. The Monterey can be divided into seven easily recognizable lithologic and faunal units: namely, (1) “Arenaceous” zone...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1958
AAPG Bulletin (1958) 42 (12): 2973–3000.
... derived from the underlying Cretaceous conglomerates. This formation was mapped as “the Redrock Canyon sandstone member of the Santa Margarita” by English (1916) , as non-marine Vaqueros by Eaton et al . (1941 , p. 217), and as the “Sespe formation” by Clements (1950) . In the Caliente, La Panza...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1950
AAPG Bulletin (1950) 34 (8): 1647–1658.
... Margarita” exposures in Oso Canyon. The dip of the beds is mostly north, but vertical beds and overturning are common. Probably the upper member is 5,000 feet thick, but no complete section is measurable. “Santa Margarita” formation .—The only known marine Tertiary beds underlie a lozenge-shaped...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1929
AAPG Bulletin (1929) 13 (5): 509–518.
... of the Santa Clara Valley region, carried on during parts of 1927 and 1928 by geologists of the Shell Company of California. This work was under the direction of the senior writer, the other members of the field party being H. J. Buddenhagen, F. B. Carter, E. K. Craig, M. L. Hill, W. W. Rand, and G. H. White...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1933
AAPG Bulletin (1933) 17 (8): 1009–1015.
..., fossiliferous facies is observed, the horizon is called by some other name. Near San Pablo Bay a thick clastic series has been divided on the basis of its macrofossils into three horizons; reading downward, the Santa Margarita (“Neroly”), Cierbo, and Briones. Since the Santa Margarita elsewhere in California...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1985
AAPG Bulletin (1985) 69 (4): 537–545.
... be produced from the upper Miocene Santa Margarita Formation and from Pliocene sandstones. The eight wells drilled on the Point Arguello structure have delineated a major Monterey oil discovery. Total producible oil reserves are estimated to be over 300 million bbl. The offshore Santa Maria basin...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1941
AAPG Bulletin (1941) 25 (7): 1327–1342.
..., are coarse detrital deposits which are assigned to the Santa Margarita on a lithologic basis and structural relationships. At the base is a member of white, pebbly sandstone, overlain by fanglomerate containing minor layers of coarse, massive sandstone. The predominant rock types found in the pebbles...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1933
AAPG Bulletin (1933) 17 (10): 1161–1193.
... character of these strata has been recognized by previous writers. Arnold and Anderson, 25 in their mapping and stratigraphic sections in the southeastern end of Reef Ridge, included the present Reef Ridge shale as an upper member of their Santa Margarita (?) formation. In the northwest end of Reef Ridge...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1948
AAPG Bulletin (1948) 32 (12): 2254–2268.
... from King City to Bradley. They range in age from upper middle Miocene to upper Miocene and may be equivalent in part to Santa Margarita sands in the eastern and southern parts of the basin. These sands are fine- to coarse-grained, poorly sorted, arkosic, and interbedded with Monterey-type shales...
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