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Distinguishing salt welds from shale detachments on the inner Texas shelf, western Gulf of Mexico
Author(s) -
McDonnell Angela,
Hudec Michael R.,
Jackson Martin P. A.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
basin research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.522
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1365-2117
pISSN - 0950-091X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2117.2008.00375.x
Subject(s) - geology , oil shale , paleogene , paleontology , cretaceous , diagenesis , diapir , geochemistry , tectonics
ABSTRACT Detachment surfaces have important implications for structural restoration, burial‐history and thermal modeling, hydrocarbon migration, and diagenesis. We present criteria to distinguish salt welds from shale detachments based on geophysical data from the inner Texas shelf. Here, the Paleogene detachment has been variously interpreted as salt or shale by different people. A newly reprocessed 8200 km 2 (3200 mi 2 ) 3D seismic volume provides excellent imaging of this detachment, which separates growth‐faulted Oligocene–Miocene strata from the underlying, gently folded Cretaceous–Eocene section. Key criteria to evaluate detachment origins include seismic amplitude response, geometry, and relationship to supradetachment and subdetachment reflections. We argue that the detachment is a salt weld because (a) it is imaged as a high‐amplitude, discrete reflection; (b) it has a ramp‐flat geometry, cutting across underlying reflections; (c) it locally forms bowl‐shaped depotroughs interpreted as former diapiric salt feeders; (d) it is overlain by seismically incoherent pods having high‐amplitude tops and bases interpreted as remnant salt; and (e) in the depotroughs associated with former diapiric salt feeders the detachment has hints of upturned strata just beneath (possible halokinetic sequences). The inferred weld represents the evacuated remains of a patchy salt canopy emplaced across the study area during the Late Eocene to Early Oligocene. Preliminary examination beyond our study area suggests that this discontinuous canopy may have extended across most of the modern Texas shelf. Most of the salt was expelled from the canopy by loading from prograding Oligo–Miocene deltaic deposits.