4.3 Article

Depositional and stratigraphic architecture of a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic depositional system in the Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) of the Southern Midcontinent, Oklahoma, USA

Journal

FACIES
Volume 68, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10347-022-00655-2

Keywords

Mixed carbonate-siliciclastic depositional systems; Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) deposition; Anadarko Basin; North American Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) stratigraphy

Funding

  1. Devon Energy and Oklahoma State University

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This study analyzes the depositional and stratigraphic architecture of Mississippian reservoirs in the Anadarko Basin using modern geologic datasets. The study reveals the depositional evolution from carbonate deposition to mixed carbonate-siliciclastic deposition, documenting marine transgression, stabilization, progradation, and transition to siliciclastic deposition. The reservoir architecture changes from proximal carbonate facies to storm-dominated ramp margin conditions, and finally to siliciclastic facies.
The Anadarko Basin of the North American Midcontinent has been explored by the hydrocarbon industry for decades, and recent efforts have created an opportunity to analyze robust modern geologic datasets for investigating the depositional and stratigraphic architecture of Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) reservoirs in the region. Core-based facies analysis coupled with the integration of geophysical well logs and previous biostratigraphic studies are the fundamental building blocks for investigating the evolution of a carbonate depositional system to a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic system. This evolution was facilitated by global climatic changes during the transition from greenhouse to icehouse conditions during the assembly of Pangaea. Initial deposition in the region was characterized by marine transgression and followed by a period of stabilization, with aggradation of the carbonate system on the Burlington shelf and coeval deposition of biostromal sponge gardens and outer ramp facies in the study area. This event was followed by progradation of the carbonate system, establishing the Meramecian (Visean) Boardman ramp margin in north-central Oklahoma, where thick successions of carbonate shoal and proximal storm deposits accumulated. The final depositional episode was characterized by an abrupt transition from carbonate to siliciclastic deposition, in which thick successions of Chesterian (Visean-Serpukhovian) siliciclastics prograded from the Boardman ramp margin into the Anadarko Basin. As a result of this depositional evolution, the reservoir architecture changes across the Anadarko Basin as progradational proximal carbonate facies transition to storm-dominated ramp margin conditions, and finally to the more prolific unconventionally targeted siliciclastic siltstone and mudstone facies of the outer ramp.

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