The Geology of the Paradox Basin and Implications for Deepwater Gulf of Mexico Exploration, Moab, Utah
The course will explore the interrelationship between sedimentation and structural geology with a particular focus on salt tectonics and salt-sediment interaction.
Description
The primary technical goal is to provide a widely applicable introduction to the interrelationship between sedimentation and structural geology with a particular focus on salt tectonics and salt-sediment interaction. The geology is examined with reference to deepwater exploration themes with the Gulf of Mexico.
Course Content
All activities subject to change based on conditions, accessibility and availability
Day 1 – Grand Junction to Moab
Field locations: Books Cliffs overview and Dead Horse Point
- Arrival into Grand Junction
- Colorado and Utah regional geology
- Paradox Basin introduction
Overnight in Moab
Day 2 – Fisher Valley and Onion Creek
Field locations: Fisher Valley Salt Wall and Stinkin’ Spring
- Non-evaporite inclusions and stringers
- Burial wedges and halokinetic sequences
- Caprock shear zones
- Salt shoulder, gravitational, syndepositional chevron folds and radial faults in burial wedges
- Synhalokinetic radial faults that compartmentalize fluid flow/cementation in Permian fluvial sandstone.
Overnight in Moab
Day 3: Arches and Salt Valley
Field locations: Arches National Park
- Fault cataclasis and fracture system.
- Deformation bands on relay ramp between two large salt dissolution collapse faults.
- Burial wedge syndepositional folding and halokinetic sequences.
Overnight in Moab
Day 4: Castle Valley
Field locations: Castle Valley and Bull Canyon
- Overview vista of Castle Valley salt wall showing halokinetic sequences
- Counter regional system associated with secondary weld
- Footwall paleotrap in Permian aeolian dune reservoir with tilted oil/water contact 3-way against salt and weld
- Dinosaur trackways
Return to Grand Junction for overnight stay or travel home
Duration and Logistics
A 4-day field course starting and finishing in Grand Junction, Colorado, comprising a mixture of lectures, field work and exercises.
Exertion Level
This course requires a MODERATE exertion level. There will be hikes to outcrops of up to 6.5km (4 miles) round trip. Some of these will encounter uneven and rocky ground with some short, steep inclines. The climate in southern Utah is typically warm to hot and dry with temperatures up to 37.5°C (100°F) and the elevation is between 1,250–1,500m (4,000–5,000 ft).
Level and Audience
Intermediate. This course requires a basic understanding of geoscience and will suit those working in the geoscience, geotechnical and engineering fields. The aim is to facilitate knowledge and experience exchange among the participants, so is open to those from a very wide range of experience levels.
Objectives
You will learn to:
- Describe the regional stratigraphy and principal structural features of the Paradox Basin, Utah.
- Characterize and interpret controls on Paradox Basin salt-related structures and key features of passive diapiric systems, including halokinetic sequences, caprock development, non-evaporite stringers / inclusions, welds, megaflaps, counter-regional faults, radial faults and burial wedges.
- Examine stratal geometries and halokinetic sequences and how these relate to intervals of salt inflation / evacuation and sediment flux.
- Assess the controls on basin fill architecture, fluid flow and deformation within the Paradox Basin and compare this to analogous salt basins worldwide.
- Understand the importance of salt basins to the energy industry for hydrocarbon production.
Tutor(s)
Kate Giles: Professor Earth Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso