Title: Stratigraphic Principles
1Stratigraphic Principles
- Types of Stratigraphy
- Focus on Modern Stratigraphy is Sequence-based
- History of Sequence Stratigraphy
- Terminology of Sequence Stratigraphy
- Examples from Permian Basin
2Stenos Laws
- It was recognized in the 1600's that in a
sedimentary sequence, the older beds are on the
bottom, and the younger beds are on the top. This
has come to be called the Principle of
Superposition. You can visualize how this occurs
if you imagine a stack of newspapers in the
corner of a room. Every day you put another
newspaper on the pile. After several weeks have
passed, you have a considerable stack of
newspapers, and the oldest ones will be on the
bottom of the pile and the most recent ones will
be on the top. This fairly obvious, but very
important fact about layering was first noted by
Nicholaus Steno, and is the first of three
principles which have come to be known as Steno's
Laws. - Steno's second law is the Principle of Original
Horizontality, which states that sediments are
deposited in flat, horizontal layers. We can
recognize this easily if we consider a
sedimentary environment such as the sea floor or
the bottom of a lake. Any storm or flood bringing
sediment to these environments will deposit it in
a flat layer on the bottom because of the
sedimentary particles settling under the
influence of gravity. As a result, a flat,
horizontal layer of sediment will be deposited. - Steno's third law is the Principle of Original
Lateral Continuity. If we consider again the
sediment being deposited on the seafloor, the
sediment will not only be deposited in a flat
layer, it will be a layer that extends for a
considerable distance in all directions. In other
words, the layer is laterally continuous.
3Types of Stratigraphy
- Classical branches
- Lithostratigraphy
- Chronostratigraphy
- Biostratigraphy
- Newer subdisciplines
- Seismic stratigraphy
- Cyclostratigraphy
- Magnetostratigraphy
- Chemostratigraphy
- Integration of disciplines in Sequence
Stratigraphy
4Terminology of Lithostratigraphic Units
- Supergroup
- Group
- Formation
- Member
- Bedset
- Bed
- Types of unconformities
- Angular unconformity
- Disconformity
- Paraconformity
- Nonconformity
- hiatus
5History of Sequence Stratigraphy Unconformities
- James Hutton (1726-1797) Father of Modern
Geology - First described unconformity at Siccar Point in
northern Scotland - In a paper entitled Theory of The Earth (1785)
Hutton recognized the importance of
unconformities - Also recognized stratigraphic nature of igneous
rocks and believed came from molten material
within Earth
6History of Sequence Stratigraphy
Uniformitarianism
Principles of Geology (1833)
7History of Sequence Stratigraphy
- William Smith measured and described outcrop
stratigraphy during excavation of transport
canals in England beginning in 1791
8History of Sequence Stratigraphy Facies
- Johannes Walther (1892) proposed what is now
known as Walthers Law of Facies Succession
"Facies adjacent to one another in a continuous
vertical sequence also accumulated adjacent to
one another laterally".
9History of Sequence Stratigraphy
Time-significant surfaces
1909 Eliot Blackwelder published use of
unconformities as time markers introduced
concept of time represented by surfaces
(erosional removal and sedimentary hiatus)
10History of Sequence Stratigraphy Cyclicity
1916 Amadeus Grabau proposed the pulsation
theory.
11History of Sequence Stratigraphy Base Level
1917 Joseph Barrell stated the most fundamental
events in geologic history--the time-space
distribution of deposition and non-deposition
the alternating rise and fall of Base-level.
12What Really Happened New Concepts from New
Technology
1951 John L. Rich proposes the concept of
clinoforms
recognition of seismic reflection geometries
13History of Sequence Stratigraphy Time
Stratigraphy
1958 Harry Wheeler produced first
chronostratigraphic chart
14History of Sequence Stratigraphy Time
Stratigraphy
1963 Lawrence Sloss recognized 6 major sequences
in North America controlled by eustatic sea level
changes
15Official Birth of Sequence Stratigraphy
1977 Peter Vail and Robert Mitchum co-ordinated
the publishing of AAPG Memoir 26 based on the
assumption that a seismic relection surface
represents a time line
16A Definition of Sequence Stratigraphy
- A framework of genetically related stratigraphic
facies geometries and their bounding surfaces
used to determine depositional setting - Subdivision interpretation of sedimentary
record using a framework surfaces seen in
outcrops, well logs, 2-D and 3-D seismic. - Include Surfaces of erosion non-deposition
(sequence boundaries), systems tracts - Flooding (trangressive surfaces TS /or maximum
flooding surfaces mfs) require that relative
sea-level is known - This framework used to predict the extent of
sedimentary facies geometry, lithologic
character, grain size, sorting reservoir
quality
17A Simpler, More Useful Definition of Sequence
Stratigraphy
A method to impose the dimension of time on the
relationships of rock units in space (area and
depth) To do this we first describe
facies Then we observe the
geometric relationships among
facies
By understanding how rock units are related in
time and space, we can better interpret how they
are connected as oil and gas reservoirs
18How is Facies Used In Sequence Stratigraphy
- Facies the total textural, compositional and
structural characteristics of a sedimentary
deposit resulting from accumulation and
modification in a particular environment - Grain size, sorting, rounding
- Lithology
- Sedimentary structures
- Bedding type
- In other words, the simplest description of the
genetically related vertical and lateral
succession
19The Problem of Preservation Potential
Sedimentary facies models are useful to explain
spatial relationships of co-eval facies in the
modern
But what will be preserved in the stratigraphic
record?
20Original Sequence Stratigraphic Approach (seismic
stratigraphy) was based on recognition of
unconformity-bound sequences using geometry and
termination patterns of seismic reflectors.
21A critical assumption of the seismic
stratigraphic approach, illustrated in this
diagram from Vail et al (1977), is that seismic
reflectors follow time surfaces rather than
facies impedance boundaries. Note the regional
scale of this illustration.
22The Classic Slug Exxon Model
SB sequence boundary LST lowstand systems
tract TST transgressive systems tract HST
highstand systems tract SMW shelf-margin
wedge Mfs maximum flooding surface Lsw
lowstand wedge Sf slope fan Bf basin-floor fan
23Sequence Boundary
- The unconformity or correlative conformity that
bounds a sequence - Not always a major physical feature
- Not ever exposure surface is a sequence boundary!
- Commonly (but not always) represents a
significant change in stratal arrangements and
therefore reservoir properites
24Maximum Flooding Surface
- Surface that marks the turn-around from
landward-stepping to seaward stepping strata - Farther out on platform coincides with the
downlap surface (depending on the degree of
condensation of clinoform toes) - Recognition of the MFS is important for
separating TST and HST, which in turn is
important for other stratigraphic analysis, but
on the platform top (where 99 of carbonate
reservoir facies occur) this can be difficult to
pin down precisely. Dont get hung up on this.
Try to pick it as closely as possible, knowing
that your colleague will disagree in order to
appear enlightened.
25Transgressive Systems Tracts
- Bounded below by underlying sequence boundary and
above by maximum flooding surface - Generally more mounded in geometry
- Sets of high-frequency cycles show upward
thickening and upward deepening trends - Typically less grainstone prone, more diverse
skeletal assemblages
26Highstand Systems Tracts
- Bounded below by maximum flooding surface and
above by overlying sequence boundary - Generally shingled or offlapping (clinoformal)
stratal geometry - Sets of high-frequency cycles show upward
thinning and upward shallowing trends - Typically grainstone prone, less diverse skeletal
assemblages
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29Terminology of Stratigraphic Hierarchies
Composite sequence
High-frequency sequence
High-frequency cycle
30Transgressive sequence set retrogradational
sequence set Highstand sequence set
progradational sequence set Lowstand sequence set
31Can we do sequence stratigraphy in carbonates
with just logs? Does anyone here work for
Schlumberger?
32Indicator facies analysis Walthers Law Model
development
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