Turbidite lobe deposits in a canyon-fill system

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Yani Lin ◽  
Tianze Zhang ◽  
Kelly H. Liu

The lower Wilcox turbidite lobe deposits located above the Cretaceous carbonate shelf edges in the Central Gulf Coast region of Texas are considered as prominent targets for petroleum production. Reliably interpreting lobe deposits is challenging due to their complex seismic geometries and isolated occurrences. The Paleogene Wilcox Group hosting the lobe deposits is a thick sequence, consisting of terrigenous clastic sediment deposits formed in marine and terrestrial environments. Multi-phase regression and transgression during the late Paleocene to the early Eocene complicated the local depositional structures and developed the incised canyon features. The turbidity-flow deposits, originated from canyon-margin deltas, formed lobes in the lower onlap fill of the canyon. We analyze both seismic data and well logs to determine the morphology and rock properties of the depositional facies along the canyon system. We also utilize seismic attributes to identify the shape and lateral variations of the sandy turbidite lobe deposits inside the canyon-fill sequence. Analyses of the selected attributes, including instantaneous phase, RMS amplitude, and spectral decomposition, indicate that the prograding deltaic sediments crawled over the steep canyon walls, followed by retrograding and consequential excavation of the canyon walls, resulting in an elongated funnel shaped canyon. During the process, the sand bodies were transported into the underwater distributary channels across the basin floor, and generated the turbidite lobe deposits within the lower onlapping canyon fill.

2008 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 301-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey M. Gillespie ◽  
Wayne Wyatt ◽  
Brad Venuto ◽  
David Blouin ◽  
Robert Boucher

Comparisons are made concerning labor required and profitability associated with continuous grazing at three stocking rates and rotational grazing at a high stocking rate in the U.S. Gulf Coast region. A unique data set was collected using a time and motion study method to determine labor requirements. Profits are lowest for low stocking rate–continuous grazing and high stocking rate–rotational grazing. Total labor and labor in three specific categories are greater on per acre and/or per cow bases with rotational-grazing than with continuous-grazing strategies. These results help to explain relatively low adoption rates of rotational grazing in the region.


Author(s):  
John Sullivan

The U.S. states along the northern shores of the Gulf of Mexico have often been described as America’s Energy Colony. This region is festooned with polluting industries, storage and waste disposal sites for toxic products, and a history of generally lax approaches to environmental public health and enforcement of regulations. This issue of New Solutions includes three interviews of groups and individuals who work for Environmental Justice in the Gulf Coast region. The interviewees provide key insights into the diverse cultural texture and social fabric of the Gulf. Their range of gulf locales and population groups embody different styles of engagement and different relationships to organizing, disseminating health and environmental risk information, and advocating for social and environmental justice. Similarities among their communities in terms of health and economic disparities, climate risks, and vulnerabilities lend credence to the idea of the Gulf as a regional Environmental Justice community.


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