4.7 Article

Carbonate sedimentation and reservoirs associated with a volcanic mound in an open-marine, deep-water, drowned platform setting, Elaine field area, Upper Cretaceous Anacacho Formation, South Texas USA

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 154, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2023.106314

Keywords

Upper Cretaceous; Anacacho Formation; Balcones Igneous Province; Volcanic mound; Gravity-flow deposits; Chalk; Carbonate facies

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Numerous small volcanoes were formed in the Balcones Igneous Province in Texas, similar to the Surtsey volcano offshore Iceland. The Elaine field in South Texas is associated with one of these volcanic highs. The integration of seismic data and cores provided a detailed analysis of the deeper-water carbonate depositional systems and reservoir development.
In the Upper Cretaceous Balcones Igneous Province in South and Central Texas, numerous small volcanoes developed during Austin Chalk and Anacacho deposition that are similar to the recent Surtsey volcano offshore of Iceland. The volcanoes formed topographic highs on the deep-water (500-900 ft [150-275 m]), earlier-drowned Comanche Platform. The Elaine field in South Texas is associated with one of these relict volcanic highs and integration of a 3D-seismic dataset and cores permitted a detailed analysis of the deeper-water carbonate depositional systems of the field and associated carbonate reservoir development. This reservoir description extends the understanding of petroleum systems associated with relict, open-marine, deep-water, volcanic highs. In the shallow water at the top of the volcanic topographic highs, a carbonate factory developed that produced coarser-grained carbonate sediments that sourced the deeper-water flanks and toe-of-slope of the mound. Finergrained carbonate chalk was deposited in the open-marine, deep-water environment adjacent to the volcanic mound. The coarser-grained carbonate sediments sourced from the mound top were transported downslope by gravity-flow processes that formed debrites and hyperconcentrated density-flow deposits. The gravity-flow deposits are composed of a mixture of shallow- and open-marine, deep-water biota indicating they are not shallowwater deposits, but are deeper-water mound-flank and toe-of-slope deposits. In the Anacacho Elaine field, the coarser-grained carbonates (i.e., skeletal packstones and grainstones) associated with the volcanic mound are the oil-producing reservoirs. The Elaine volcanic mound itself is tight and not productive. The Anacacho chalk immediately above the mound are also tight and form the top seal for the Elaine field. Associated with the relict volcanic mounds in the Balcones Igneous Province are a spectrum of carbonate plays. The relict volcano can be a reservoir, but not all the relict volcanic mounds are porous. The coarser-grain carbonates on the top, flanks, and at the base of the volcanic mounds are reservoirs in the area of the Balcones Igneous Province. The chalks deposited penecontemporaneously on the open-marine, deep-water platform can also be tight carbonate reservoirs.

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