New Understanding of the Petroleum Systems of Continental Margins of the World

Petroleum Geology of the Mississippi Canyon, Atwater Valley, Western Desoto Canyon, and Western Lloyd Areas, Northern Deep Gulf of Mexico: Traps, Reservoirs, and Their Timing
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Published:December 01, 2012
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CiteCitation
Paul Weimer, Renaud Bouroullec, 2012. "Petroleum Geology of the Mississippi Canyon, Atwater Valley, Western Desoto Canyon, and Western Lloyd Areas, Northern Deep Gulf of Mexico: Traps, Reservoirs, and Their Timing", New Understanding of the Petroleum Systems of Continental Margins of the World, Norman C. Rosen, Paul Weimer, Sylvia Maria Coutes dos Anjos, Sverre Henrickson, Edmundo Marques, Mike Mayall, Richard Fillon, Tony D’Agostino, Art Saller, Kurt Campion, Tim Huang, Rick Sarg, Fred Schroeder
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Abstract
The petroleum geology of the Mississippi Canyon, Atwater Valley, western DeSoto and western Lloyd Ridge protraction areas, offshore northern Gulf of Mexico, is controlled by the interaction of salt tectonics and high sedimentation rate during the Neogene, and has resulted resulting in a complex distribution of reservoirs and traps. Seventy-eight fields/discoveries are evaluated and comprise structures with four-way closures (18), three-way closures (46), and stratigraphic traps (14). Three of these discoveries are in Upper Jurassic eolian reservoirs, the remainder are in Neogene deep-water reservoirs.
The tectonic-stratigraphic evolution of the area is analyzed at eleven discrete intervals between 24 Ma and Present. The analyses show how the allochthonous salt systems evolved over time, and their effect on sedimentation patterns and sub-basin evolution.
The study area includes some of the largest fields in the northern deep Gulf of Mexico. Thunder Horse produces from an anticlinal (turtle) structure that developed with a basement-controlled allochthonous system. The greater Mars-Ursa sub-basin has nine fields with > 1.5 BBBOE EUR, including Mars, Ursa and Princess, that developed with a counterregional allochthonous salt system. The remaining fields have considerably smaller reserves, which are controlled by the area within closure and number of reservoir intervals. Many of the smaller fields are produced from one well subsea tiebacks.
Most of fields in the study area are contained within sheet-like or wedge-shaped stratigraphic intervals and have four-way or three-way trapping configurations. These findings reflect the profound effect that mobile salt has had on the petroleum geology of the region.
- anticlines
- Atlantic Ocean
- Atwater Valley
- Cenozoic
- channels
- chemically precipitated rocks
- clastic rocks
- compaction
- De Soto Canyon
- evaporites
- faults
- folds
- Gulf of Mexico
- Jurassic
- Kimmeridgian
- lithofacies
- Louann Salt
- Mesozoic
- Miocene
- Mississippi Canyon
- nappes
- Neogene
- North Atlantic
- offshore
- oil and gas fields
- petroleum
- petroleum exploration
- Pleistocene
- Pliocene
- production
- Quaternary
- rates
- reserves
- reservoir rocks
- salt
- salt tectonics
- sandstone
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- shale
- stratigraphic traps
- structural traps
- submarine fans
- subsalt strata
- tectonics
- Tertiary
- traps
- Upper Jurassic
- well logs
- Mississippi Fan fold belt
- Lloyd Ridge
- Thunder Horse Field
- Mars-Ursa Subbasin