Balanced Cross
Section
Through Wilburton Gas Field, Latimer
County, Oklahoma: Implications for Ouachita Deformation and Arbuckle
(Cambro-Ordovician) Exploration in Arkoma Basin
Wayne K. Camp, Robert A. Ratliff
A computer-balanced regional cross
section
allows several new interpretations
for the structural development of the Wilburton gas field. The gas-productive
deep Arbuckle structure is interpreted to be in the hanging wall of a
high-angle, south-dipping reverse fault. This fault may be a reactivated normal
fault based on Pennsylvanian lower Atokan thickness changes and by analogy to
comparable extensional faults to the north. Overlying the Arbuckle fault block
is an imbricated thrust sheet containing Pennsylvanian Spiro and Cromwell
sandstone reservoirs where gas production has been established from both the
hanging wall and footwall fault blocks. The main thrust originates from a
detachment zone within Mississippian shales to the south and ramps over the
deeper Arbuckle fa lt block along the southern margin of the field. Minimum
horizontal displacement of the hanging wall Spiro cutoff is 2.3 mi (3.7 km).
This estimate is significantly smaller than that shown by previously published
sections through the area, yet is still too large to be adequately accommodated
by blind thrusting north of Wilburton field. Well and surface data indicate that
much of the displacement instead may have been accommodated by north-dipping
backthrusts. Although poorly constrained, at least some fault movement on the
Arbuckle reverse fault appears to postdate the overlying thrust-faulted
structures.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91025©1989 AAPG Midcontinent, Sept. 24-26, 1989, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.