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Cross section of the Bahamas showing structural and stratigraphic features interpretedfrom seismic lines. This cross section follows a zigzagging, southeast trend line from Florida, through the northern tip ofAndros Island to the Bahama escarpment (Source: Ladd and Sheridan 1987).

Cross section of the Bahamas showing structural and stratigraphic features interpretedfrom seismic lines. This cross section follows a zigzagging, southeast trend line from Florida, through the northern tip ofAndros Island to the Bahama escarpment (Source: Ladd and Sheridan 1987).

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In the early 1980’s, the Getty Oil Company developed petroleum play concepts for several lease areas that it controlled in the Bahamas. Interest in these areas was based upon the facts that both Cuba and Florida had producing oil fields, oil shows were reported in test wells that had been drilled in the Bahamas and the well logs from these test wel...

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Citations

... Early Jurassic rifting caused marine water influx, creating shallow water conditions (Epstein & Clark, 2009;Iturralde-Vinent et al., 2016;Ladd & Sheridan, 1987;Moretti et al., 2003;Walles, 1993). Middle Jurassic syn-rift redbeds were succeeded by evaporites in hypersaline lagoons (Figure 2b; Gaumet et al., 2004;Padilla y Sánchez, 2016). ...
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The Eastern Cuban block has experienced a complex tectonic history characterized by plate interactions, resulting in a diverse array of geological features observable in the offshore sedimentary record. We investigate the tectonic evolution of offshore Eastern Cuba, specifically in the Old Bahamas Channel and its surrounding areas, by integrating multi‐channel seismic (MCS) reflection and published geological data. Our analysis employs stratigraphic frameworks and MCS data to assess deformation and key geological events in the region. We highlight the complex tectonic history of the Eastern Cuban block, marked by significant geodynamic events, such as rifting, the subduction of the oceanic Proto‐Caribbean plate, and syn‐orogenic and post‐orogenic phases. The seismic units observed in the majority of the study area reveal the early evolution of the Northern Proto‐Caribbean margin, subsequently impacted by the Cuban orogeny and the reactivation of the Cuban Transform Fault zone corresponding to a former plate boundary. We propose estimated ages for the seismic sequences, correlating them with available well data from neighboring regions. This study offers valuable insights into the tectonic history and geological evolution of offshore Eastern Cuba, contributing to a more comprehensive understanding of the region's geodynamic development.
... However, this understanding has always been challenged by the existence of deep petroleum reservoirs. The Smackover dolostones deeper than 5100 m still have an average porosity of 15% in the Jay Field (Melas and Friedman, 1992); the Great Isaac 1 well encountered live oil in the dolostone reservoir of 10% to 18% porosity and 5390 m depth in the southern Bahamas area (Epstein and Clark, 2009); dolostones in the Delaware basin have up to 12% effective porosity at a depth of 6477 m (Amthor and Friedman, 1991). ...
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Discoveries of deep high‐quality carbonate reservoirs challenged the general knowledge on the evolution of porosity which decrease with deepening. New mechanisms of pore generation and preservation in the deep realm need to be proposed. Dolostones in the Feixianguan and Dengying Formations experienced maximum depth excess 8000 m, but still retain high porosities. Petrographic observation and homogenization temperatures help to identify products of deep fluid‐rock interactions, visual and experimental porosity were used to quantify reservoir effects, finally the distribution of products was plotted to unravel the mechanisms. Th data reveal that thermochemical sulfate reduction (TSR), burial dissolution and quartz cementation are the typical deep fluid‐rock interactions. The SO42− of residual porewater sourced from the evaporative dolomitizing fluid was supplied for TSR in the hydrocarbon column, the TSR‐inducing calcite cements were homogeneously dispersed in the hydrocarbon column. Quartz cementation was caused by the increasing acidity and Si‐rich residual porewater in the oil column. Burial dissolution is forced by organic acid and limited in the oil–water contact. This study suggests that seal and source rocks not only play important roles on hydrocarbon accumulation, but also have general control on the deep fluid‐rock interactions and porosity evolution in the deep burial realm.
... Potentially, the solid-state reordering of 13 C-18 O, which could influence the amount of 13 C-18 O in the carbonate mineral crystal lattices, could occur if the ambient temperature around the carbonate rocks was >100°C over a period of tens of millions of years (Dennis and Schrag, 2010;Passey and Henkes, 2012;Henkes et al., 2014). Geothermal gradients reported from isolated Cenozoic islands range from~−20°C·km −1 for Enewetak Atoll in the equatorial Pacific Ocean (Saller, 1984),~10°C·km −1 for the Nansha Islands in the South China Sea , to~15°C·km −1 for the Bahamian platform (Epstein and Clark, 2009). Based on these figures, especially the geothermal gradients of Nansha Islands in the South China Sea , the deepest part of the Huangliu Formation in CK-2 (~520 m) probably experienced a maximum burial temperature of no more than 50°C. ...
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... We use 30 °C/km for simplicity. We note that this geotherm is higher than the range given in Winkelstern and Lohmann (2016) of 13-18 °C/km for the area, which is based on unpublished geothermal measurements from the Getty Corporation (Epstein and Clark, 2009). We prefer the ODP-based geothermal gradients as the data and methodology used to calculate them are traceable and were conducted during drilling with the explicit purpose of measuring geothermal gradients (Pribnow et al., 2000). ...
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Thesis
This dissertation focuses on how mineralogical differences affect original clumped isotope (Δ47) values and how they are changed through diagenesis. A primary motivation for this work was to understand the geologic conditions under which the clumped isotope thermometer can be applied with confidence to paleoclimatic problems. To place empirical constraints on the conditions under which Δ47 alteration can occur, samples from a ~4500 m long drill core from Andros Island, Bahamas were analyzed. These limestones and dolomites formed under near-surface temperature conditions, but for samples below ~1.3 km in depth, calculated Δ47 temperatures increase by ~10° C. This indicates a shift from preserved near-surface temperatures to diagenetically modified values. Importantly, this shift is not accompanied by changes in common diagenetic indicators, and thus raises the possibility of solid-state clumped isotope alteration occurring at much lower temperatures than previously thought. Similar Δ47 temperatures recorded by each carbonate phase suggest that fine-grained dolomites and calcites are equally viable materials for recording surface temperature conditions, but both are also equally susceptible to alteration of their primary clumped isotope abundances when buried. A challenge remaining in clumped isotope thermometry was the lack of an empirical calibration for dolomite, which had been theoretically predicted to differ from established calibrations. Here, analysis of a set of synthetic and natural dolomites formed at known temperatures results in a calibration line statistically indistinguishable from calcite clumped isotope calibrations. This supports the idea of a universal calibration for carbonate clumped isotope thermometry and enables new investigations into conditions of dolomite formation. Finally, the clumped isotope thermometer can be applied to key intervals for investigating paleoclimate and testing paleoclimate questions. To determine sea surface temperatures and water composition in Bermuda during the onset of Last Interglacial sea level rise, conventional and clumped isotope measurements of fossil shells were conducted. These results suggest meltwater influence and temperatures as much as 10° C colder than modern, requiring explanations that allow for major changes in North Atlantic surface ocean circulation. They also illustrate extreme sensitivity of Bermudian climate to broad-scale climate and ocean circulation changes.
... Principal geological reference for this study is a paper by Epstein and Clark (2009) who presented findings of the Getty Frontier Exploration team in the southeastern Bahamas in the 1980s. The paper describes in some detail stratigraphic information revealed in the six Bahamas wells. ...
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