Devonian and Mississippian Sappington Formation in Southwest Montana

Devonian and Mississippian Sappington Formation in Southwest Montana
Author: Aaron P. Rodriguez
Publisher:
Total Pages: 270
Release: 2014
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

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Hydrocarbon production success from the Bakken Formation of the Williston Basin has led to interest in time-equivalent Devonian-Mississippian strata. One of these Bakken-equivalent formations is the Sappington Formation of western Montana. This regionally 30 ft. to 120 ft. thick mixed carbonate and fine-grained siliciclastic unit occurs between thick Devonian and Mississippian carbonates and was deposited in the low-accommodation intracratonic Sappington Basin of the Central Montana Trough (CMT). Differential foreland subsidence and uplift of the CMT resulted in changing depocenter geometries. Despite the tectonic and paleogeographic differences between the Sappington Basin and the Williston Basin, the Sappington and Bakken share similar intracratonic depositional elements. This study focused on outcrop Sappington sections in the Three Forks, Montana area. Regionally, the Sappington pinches out to the south and northeast onto the paleogeographic highs of the Beartooth Shelf and Central Montana Uplift. To the west, correlation of Sappington and Antler Foreland Basin units have been complicated by Sevier and Laramide deformation. Within the Sappington Basin thinning and lateral facies relationships suggest significant early western accommodation of facies with potential for local proximal variations. Similar to the coeval Bakken Formation, the Sappington's three members (Lower, Middle, Upper) are separated by abrupt facies shifts and unconformities. The Lower and Upper Members both display black organic preservation during periods of quiescent anoxic bottom water conditions. Such conditions were driven by early Gondwanan glaciation producing widespread equatorial Late Devonian eustatic effects. The Middle Member is a well oxygenated mix of wave and tidal dominant energies located within the shoreface regime. The low-accommodation intracratonic character of the Sappington Basin complicates establishment of a sequence stratigraphic framework. Episodic flooding and draining of the Sappington Basin is represented by four prominent unconformities within a succession of rocks averaging 75 ft. in thickness and with a depositional timeline of ~8 million years. Subsequently, lowstand system tracts deposits are not observed in the study area and are represented by stacked sequence boundaries and transgressive surfaces.

Correlation and Stratigraphic Analysis of the Bakken and Sappington Formations in Montana

Correlation and Stratigraphic Analysis of the Bakken and Sappington Formations in Montana
Author: Zeynep Adiguzel
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian (Late Fammenian-Tournaisian) Bakken Formation in the Williston Basin is one of the largest continuous oil fields in the U.S. The upper and the lower shale members are organic rich source rocks that supplied oil to the middle member, which is reservoir rock. Although the oil-producing Bakken Formation has been intensely studied in the Williston Basin, the lateral relationship between the Bakken Formation and the coeval Sappington Formation in western Montana remains cryptic. This study correlates the Sappington Formation in western Montana with the Bakken Formation in the Williston Basin in northeastern Montana. It clarifies the lateral relationship between these two units, and extent of their members across Montana and, the causes of these thickness variations. This study utilized 675 well logs (mostly gamma ray, caliper, sonic, density, neutron, resistivity logs) to make multiple E-W and N-S cross sections and isopach maps. Also, seven outcrops of the Sappington Formation in southwestern Montana and five Bakken Formation cores in the Williston Basin were tied to the subsurface data. Variations in the distribution of the Bakken/Sappington Formation were caused by eustatic changes and local epeirogenic uplifts. The Bakken/Sappington Formation is thickest in the depressions in southwestern and the northeastern Montana, the Central Montana Trough and the Williston Basin in Montana. The Bakken/Sappington Formation is thin coincident with major structural uplifts that were active during the Late Devonian, such as Yellowstone Park Uplift, Bearpaw Anticline, Scapegoat-Bannatyne Anticline and Nesson Anticline. Devonian strata are difficult to identify in the subsurface of south-central Montana making the Bakken/Sappington correlation problematic in this area. The Lower Bakken/Sappington Member thickness is 15 ft (4.6 m) in northeastern and southwestern Montana. The Lower Bakken/Sappington Member is more continuous in western Montana than the other Bakken/Sappington Members. The Middle Bakken/Sappington Member is thickest (~55 ft; 16.7 m) in the northeastern Williston Basin and in the Central Montana Trough (~50 ft; 15.2 m). The Middle Bakken/Sappington Member was less affected by the tectonics and it is present from northwestern to northeastern Montana, except in far northwestern and central Montana. The Upper Bakken Member (~5-15 ft; 1.5 m-4.6 m) is the most continuous unit in the Williston Basin, as the Bakken Members show onlapping relationship that makes the distribution of each younger member greater. However, the Upper Bakken/Sappington Member is absent west of the Central Montana Trough due to basin inversion and it is also absent in far northwestern and central Montana as a result of the erosion or nondeposition caused by the local uplifts. Transgressions were responsible for the deposition of the upper and the lower black shales in offshore marine environments, whereas the Middle Bakken/Sappington Member was deposited during regression and records multiple offshore marine to tidal environments. The electronic version of this dissertation is accessible from http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148352

Nomenclature and Correlation of Lithologic Subdivisions of the Jefferson and Three Forks Formations of Southern Montana and Northern Wyoming

Nomenclature and Correlation of Lithologic Subdivisions of the Jefferson and Three Forks Formations of Southern Montana and Northern Wyoming
Author: Charles Albert Sandberg
Publisher:
Total Pages: 28
Release: 1965
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

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The Jefferson Formation (upper Devonian) comprises a thick lower member and the Birdbear Member. The overlying Three Forks Formation (Devonian and Mississippian) comprises the Logan Gulch, Trident, and Sappington Members. These members are described at the classic type section of the Jefferson and Three Forks Formations near Logan, Mont., and their distribution in southern Montana and northern Wyoming is shown. The members are correlated with stratigraphic units adjoining parts of Montana. Idaho, Wyoming, North Dakota, and Canada.