Deep-Water Carbonates: Buildups, Turbidites, Debris Flows and Chalks—A Core Workshop

Deep-water carbonates represent on the few frontiers remaining for carbonate exploration and research. The last decade has experienced a rapid evolution in concepts of depositional models and diagenesis which underscores the importance of these deposits as significant reservoirs and source rocks. This workshop displayed cores selected to provide subsurface geologic examples of deepwater carbonates from a variety of depositional settings. Several papers discuss depositional models, platform-to-basin reconstructions, and diagenetic sequences that are important in the development and exploration of Paleozoic carbonate debris flow and turbidite reservoirs of the Palo Duro, Delaware and Midland Basins. Many other examples are included from several different regions.
Accretion in Deep Shelf-Edge Reefs, St. Croix, U.S.V.I. Available to Purchase
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Published:January 01, 1985
Abstract
Fourteen cores from deeper, shelf-edge reefs on St. Croix, USVI, record an impressive ability to build substantial thicknesses of carbonate material, both horizontally and laterally. At Salt River submarine canyon, over 24 m of Holocene reef material has been added laterally to a reef now in 30 m of water. Most of that thickness is caused by the accumulation of displaced rubble and larger talus blocks from shallower reefs above.
At Cane Bay, the amount of in-place framework decreases with depth, while the actual rate of reef accretion increases. Like at Salt River, much of this accretion was caused by the incorporation of debris derived from shallower water.
Both of these modern reefs are substantially or wholly collections of displaced reefal material derived from somewhere upslope. With the percentage of framework down near 30%, and much of that being out of place, it would clearly be difficult to distinguish these as true reefs in the ancient based on core data alone.