Regional Tertiary cross sections, Texas Gulf Coast

dc.contributorLuttrell, P. E.
dc.contributorSeo, J. H.
dc.coverage.box-100, -94.05, 31.4, 25.8378
dc.coverage.spatialGulf Coast, Texas
dc.creatorBebout, Don G.
dc.creatorLuttrell, P. E.
dc.creatorSeo, J. H.
dc.date.accessioned2019-10-28T18:08:38Z
dc.date.available2019-10-28T18:08:38Z
dc.date.issued1976
dc.descriptionBureau Publication GC7605 - to purchase a print copy please go to: https://store.beg.utexas.edu/geologic-circulars/424-gc7605.html
dc.description.abstractThe Bureau of Economic Geology has been conducting regional studies of the Frio Formation along the Texas Gulf Coast to evaluate potential geothermal energy from deep, geopressured sandstone reservoirs (Bebout, Dorfman, and Agagu, 1975; Bebout, Agagu, and Dorfman, 1975). The procedures used in this evaluation were reviewed at the Second Geopressured Geothermal Energy Conference held at The University of Texas at Austin and sponsored by the United States Energy Research and Development Administration. The index map (fig. 1) and cross sections (figs. 2-7) included in this circular were prepared for that meeting and were included in the Proceedings (Bebout, 1976). Published regional cross sections (Corpus Christi Geological Society Study Group, 1954-55, 1964; Deussen and Owen, 1939; Houston Geological Society Study Group, 1954, 1972; and South Texas Geological Society, 1951), unpublished cross sections provided by several major oil companies, and extensive micropaleontological and electrical-log files at the Bureau of Economic Geology served as basic data. These sections are meant to show gross regional distribution of sand and shale facies both laterally and vertically throughout the entire Tertiary section along the Texas Gulf Coast. Closely spaced wells were used for detailed correlation, but for clarity many have been omitted for these cross sections (fig. 1 and table 1). Growth faults tend to obscure regional trends and have been omitted. The top of the geopressure zone is indicated by an arrow. At least eight sand-shale wedges are easily recognized on regional electrical-log cross sections (figs. 2-7). Hardin (1961) illustrated the major wedges as the Midway/Wilcox, Reklaw/Queen City, Weches/Sparta, Cook Mountain/Yegua, Jackson, Vicksburg, Frio, and Anahuac/Fleming. The Pliocene and Pleistocene comprise additional cycles but are undifferentiated in this study. These cycles reflect changes in the ancient shoreline resulting from variations in sediment supply, rate of subsidence, and position of sea level. In general, in the updip end of the wedge the main sand depocenter is in the lower part of the section and downdip it is progressively higher in the section; this is a progradational cycle. In order to emphasize these wedges, the boundary between the facies-related sand-shale couplet is defined by a dashed line on the cross sections. Time lines within the couplet are expected to cross the dashed line as the deltaic or barrier sands prograde basinward over the prodelta or shelf shales.
dc.description.departmentBureau of Economic Geology
dc.description.departmentUT Libraries
dc.format.dimensions10 p. : graphs ; 28 cm.
dc.identifierGC7605
dc.identifier.citationBebout, D. G., Luttrell, P. E., and Seo, J. H., 1976, Regional Tertiary Cross Sections: Texas Gulf Coast: The University of Texas at Austin, Bureau of Economic Geology, Geological Circular 76-5, 10 p. doi.org/10.23867/gc7605Den_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2152/77895
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.26153/tsw/4984
dc.publisherUniversity of Texas at Austin. Bureau of Economic Geology
dc.relation.ispartofVirtual Landscapes of Texas
dc.relation.ispartofGeological Circulars
dc.relation.ispartofseriesGeological Circular (University of Texas at Austin. Bureau of Economic Geology), 76-5
dc.rights.restrictionOpen
dc.subjectGeology -- Texas -- Gulf Region
dc.subjectGeology -- Stratigraphic -- Tertiary
dc.titleRegional Tertiary cross sections, Texas Gulf Coast
dc.typeOther

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