Linking Shelf and Slope Deposits Outboard the Sable Subbasin, Offshore Nova Scotia: Improved Understanding of Cretaceous Fluvial-Deltaic Systems, Shelf-Edge Trajectories, and Equivalent Deepwater Strata
The Cretaceous shelf to slope transition outboard the Sable Subbasin, offshore Nova Scotia, Canada, is often inadequately imaged and
therefore poorly understood. In part this is because of the complex structural
geology across this important boundary. Even the simple mapping
of shelf-edge
trajectories has been problematic and there is significant uncertainty about
how to correlate shelf strata onto the equivalent slope. Consequently, there
has been disagreement about
paleogeography
and shelf-slope gross depositional
environments. In this poster we present two composite seismic sections to be
used as type sections for the central and western Sable Subbasin and to aid
correlation of seismic markers across the Cretaceous shelf-slope transition. Line
locations were carefully chosen to intersect features commonly found at or near
shelf breaks, such as offlap geometries and canyon heads. These profiles also
avoid salt structures and areas affected by large amounts of listric faulting
while still remaining within the coverage of 3D seismic data. These lines
demonstrate that high confidence correlations to deep water are still possible
when care is taken to select a route that avoids geologic features that degrade
seismic imaging. Seismic geomorphology of fluvial-deltaic deposits from 3D
seismic surveys, and identification of numerous canyon heads aids in our
interpretation of shelf-edge trajectories through time. On the slope, 3D
seismic attributes coupled with time-thickness maps have been used to identify
sediment transport corridors interpreted to connect to shelf margin canyon
systems. This work, coupled with our improved understanding of slope morphology
at the time of deposition, provides a clearer understanding of the five
existing Cretaceous deepwater well penetrations outboard the Sable Subbasin.
These results can be used to guide deepwater exploration off Nova Scotia.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90142 © 2012 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, April 22-25, 2012, Long Beach, California