Structural Evolution and Hydrocarbon Trapping Mechanisms: Hankamer Field Area, Liberty and Chambers Counties, Texas
Kathleen E. Herrington Mabe
The Hankamer field area, located in the Houston salt dome embayment, is
associated with a deep-seated salt structure, and related complex graben and
radial fault
systems. Palinspastic restorations, geochemical and paleontological
studies, and paleobathymetric maps have been used to reveal the structural
evolution of the upper Eocene through middle Miocene sediments.
Data from 400 wells and 37 mi (60 km) of two-dimensional seismic data were
integrated to generate structure, isopach, fault
plane
maps, and cross sections
over a 74 mi2 (192 km2) area. The palinspastic restoration
of a seismic
profile
was constrained by maintaining the bed length and the
volume of salt in two dimensions, and accounting for the depositional
environment and water depth, established from a paleontological study. The
palinspastic restoration provided insight into the structural configuration of
the salt dome during late Eocene through middle Miocene and the timing of
various faulting episodes.
The beginning stages of salt movement occurred on the upthrown side of a
major counter-regional normal fault
. Salt withdrawal created a rim syncline on
the west flank of the field, indicated by a paleobathymetric low and isopach
thick. A combination of lateral and upward salt movement caused additional
counter-regional faulting along the west-northwest salt face, which is believed
to have formed a pathway hydrocarbon migration from a deeply buried source bed.
Salt movement contemporaneous with late Eocene through early Oligocene
deposition resulted in a paleobathymetric high as evidenced by thinning and
non-deposition or erosion over the salt crest. During the early through late
Oligocene, salt movement on the east flank of the field caused an additional 600
ft (183 m) of vertical dis lacement on a radial normal
fault
, transversely
oriented to the counter-regional
fault
system. This movement was indicated by an
area of thinning and nondeposition or erosion of lower and upper Oligocene
sediments on the upthrown side of the radial
fault
. A complex graben
fault
system developed parallel with this radial
fault
.
The combination of graben faulting and structural closure traps the majority
of the oil in Hankamer field within Miocene sands. The palinspastic restoration
and geochemical study suggest substantial late fault
movement caused hydrocarbon
leakage from the Oligocene into the Miocene sands.
This study demonstrates that a field established in 1929 with a cumulative production of 52 million bbl of oil can be more accurately mapped and developed by obtaining a better understanding of the field's structural evolution, migration history, and trapping mechanisms. As a result, additional development and delineation prospects have been defined in areas previously thought to be void of economic reserves.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91030©1988 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, 20-23 March 1988.