Stratigraphy and Petroleum Exploration History of the Cotton Valley Group (Lower Cretaceous to Upper Jurassic) and Haynesville Group (Upper Jurassic), offshore northeastern Gulf of Mexico
Delta-plain beds comprise red/brown sandstone and siltstone displaying blocky Sp curves. The prodelta environment contains interbedded red/brown siltstone and white sandstone with spiky Sp curves. Interbedded lagoonal sediments are characterized by white sandstone and gray micrite with spiky Sp curves and poorly developed Sp curves respectively. Barrier islands exhibit white sandstone and red/brown siltstone with blocky Sp curves. Open-marine environments are characterized by interbedded black shale and thin gray sandstone exhibiting poorly developed Sp curves.
Knowles Limestone deposition began along the shelf-edge penecontemporaneously with a basin filling clastic wedge during the Upper Jurassic/Lower Cretaceous. Three Lower Cretaceous platforms developed over the clastic wedge with the uppermost platform extending 100 miles landward of the shelf edge. This extensive marker was later subaerialy exposed.
Petroleum exploration of the Cotton Valley/Haynesville Groups is sparse, but gas shows occur in both clastics and carbonates within the Mississippi Sound, Mobile, Viosca Knoll, and Main Pass Areas. The nearest onshore Cotton Valley production is found in barrier island sands at the Catahoula Creek Field, Hancock County, Mississippi. Such sands extend from Southern Mississippi to offshore Destin Dome Area, offering future exploration targets.