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Scientific Investigations Report 2014–5056

Alaska Petroleum Systems Project

Influence of the Kingak Shale Ultimate Shelf Margin on Frontal Structures of the Brooks Range in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska

By Natalie E. Stier, Christopher D. Connors, and David W. Houseknecht

Thumbnail of and link to report PDF (1.15 MB)Abstract

The Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous Kingak Shale in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska (NPRA) includes several southward-offlapping depositional sequences that culminate in an ultimate shelf margin, which preserves the depositional profile in southern NPRA. The Kingak Shale thins abruptly southward across the ultimate shelf margin and grades into condensed shale, which is intercalated with underlying condensed shale and chert of the Upper Triassic Shublik Formation and overlying condensed shale of the Lower Cretaceous pebble shale unit and the gamma-ray zone (GRZ) of the Hue Shale. This composite of condensed shale forms a thin (≈300-meter) and mechanically weak section between much thicker and mechanically stronger units, including the Sadlerochit and Lisburne Groups below and the sandstone-prone foredeep wedge of the Torok Formation above.

Seismic interpretation indicates that the composite condensed section acted as the major detachment during an Early Tertiary phase of deformation in the northern foothills of the Brooks Range and that thrust faults step up northward to the top of the Kingak, or to other surfaces within the Kingak or the overlying Torok. The main structural style is imbricate fault-bend folding, although fault-propagation folding is evident locally, and large-displacement thrust faults incorporate backthrusting to form structural wedges. The Kingak ultimate shelf margin served as a ramp to localize several thrust faults, and the spatial relationship between the ultimate shelf margin and thrust vergence is inferred to have controlled many structures in southern NPRA. For example, the obliqueness of the Carbon Creek anticline relative to other structures in the foothills is the result of northward-verging thrust faults impinging obliquely on the Kingak ultimate shelf margin in southwestern NPRA.

First posted May 9, 2014

  • Plate 1 PDF (55.7 MB)
    Interpreted seismic lines in southwestern National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska showing structures associated with the Carbon Creek fault zone and the Kingak Shale ultimate shelf margin.

For additional information, contact:
Energy Resources
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Reston, VA 20192
http://energy.usgs.gov/

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Suggested citation:

Stier, N.E., Connors, C.D., and Houseknecht, D.W., 2014, Influence of the Kingak Shale ultimate shelf margin on frontal structures of the Brooks Range in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2014–5056, 11 p., 1 pl., http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/sir20145056.

ISSN 2328-0328 (online)



Contents

Abstract

Introduction

Geologic Setting

Methods

Observations and Interpretations

Discussion

Conclusions

References


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