Subsurface Facies Architecture and Sequence
Stratigraphy of the Eileen Sandstone, Shublik Formation, and Sag River
Formation, Arctic Alaska
By
E.J. Hulm (BP Sunbury)
The Upper Triassic
through Lower Jurassic on Alaska’s North Slope is a critical stratigraphic
interval underlying a major sequence
boundary between pre-rift and syn-rift
mega-sequences. This work is a subsurface
analysis
of the units immediately
underlying this boundary to better understand the paleogeography and
depositional history, depositional controls, and regional character and
distribution of a major source rock unit (Shublik Formation) and minor reservoir
rock intervals (Eileen sandstone and Sag River Sandstone).
Well
data from across the North Slope were utilized
to describe and interpret the facies architecture, depositional setting, and
sequence
stratigraphy of the Eileen sandstone,
Shublik Formation, and Sag River Sandstone. The Upper Triassic was subdivided
into 15 depositional facies that are interpreted to represent marginal marine
and shelf depositional settings.
Analysis
of facies stacking patterns, resulted
in the identification of four facies associations, which are interpreted to
define progradational, aggradational, and retrogradational packages deposited in
response to fluctuations in relative sea level. The facies associations were
used in conjunction with biostratigraphic data and key surfaces to subdivide the
Eileen through Sag River interval into two complete third-order depositional
sequences and a partial third-order sequences.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.