Sulphur Ore Controls Within the Salado and Castile Formation of West Texas

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Leo J. Miller
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
28
File Size:
1257 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1992

Abstract

Sulphur deposits occur within the upper Salado and Rustler gypsum beds. The formation of a sulphur ore deposit requires large quantities of oil and /or gas, which must find a permeable pathway into the gypsum beds. The Permian beds weathered for 90 million years in an arid environment prior to the advent of a more humid climate at the beginning of the Cretaceous Period. The first Cretaceous rivers enlarged the sinkholes and caverns of the Karstified Permian terrain and deposited coarse conglomerates and sands into the subsurface gypsum beds. The resulting network of caverns and sinkholes, filled with permeable sediments, permitted the free flow of hydrocarbons through gypsum. All sinkholes and caverns infilled with Cretaceous sediments that have penetrated beds of gypsum are associated with sulphur deposits. The Castile gypsum lies directly upon the oil bearing Bell Canyon formation. Sinkholes and caverns filled with Cretaceous sediments occur in the lower Castile. Biogenic calcite and sulphur are adjacent to these sediments. However, faults assume the major role in generating the initial permeability, allowing hydrocarbons to penetrate the lower Castile gypsum. The largest faults are associated with biogenic calcite and sulphur for a distance of 250 meters up from the bottom of the Castile gypsum. It is apparent that two dynamic geological processes are generating permeability within the gypsum beds: (1) the Cretaceous sands decending with difficulty into gypsum and (2) the faults creating permeability in the lower Castile but losing energy through soft bed deformation in the overlying gypsum. Both of these sulphur ore controls are mappable, but another large sulphur deposit of the magnitude of the Culberson Sulphur Mine has yet to be discovered. It appears that massive sulphur deposits are associated with the largest scale examples of each system, that is (1) high densities of deep sinkholes and separately
Citation

APA: Leo J. Miller  (1992)  Sulphur Ore Controls Within the Salado and Castile Formation of West Texas

MLA: Leo J. Miller Sulphur Ore Controls Within the Salado and Castile Formation of West Texas. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1992.

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