The economic and operational risks associated with Mass Transport Complexes (MTCs) in deepwater hydrocarbon exploration act as a principal motivation to investigate their depositional elements utilizing industry data. There is a lack of extensive seismic and well data coverage that limits the understanding of the processes associated with the evolution of MTCs within deepwater sedimentary basins. This study leverages a unique integrated dataset to evaluate the depositional character and potential failure mechanisms of seven identified MTCs preserved in a synkinematic mid-Pleistocene MTC-dominant interval that spans the hydrocarbon bearing Mars Ursa Basin in the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Through seismic interpretation and attribute extraction methods using a 3D PDSM seismic survey, we describe kinematic indicators and preserved morphodomains geometries of the identified MTCs. The MTC-dominant interval covers an area of 631 km2, a volume of 392 km3, and a maximum thickness of 549 m in minibasin centers. The interval is penetrated by fifteen boreholes that provide stratigraphic and lithologic calibration of the morphometric analyses. The lithological composition of the MTC-rich interval is claystone/mudstone-dominant with a few interbedded, thin sandstones. The identified kinematic indicators and geometric extent of the identified MTCs are a function of both local salt tectonics extrabasinal controls. The stratigraphic framework presented in this study constrains the timing of failures to a period of high sediment deposition related to a major increase of glacial input into the Quaternary Mississippi Fan. This study offers borehole calibrated MTC morphometrics preserved in a MTC-dominant interval whose failure is triggered by local salt inflation, but ultimately is a consequence of loading following increased sediment supply into the basin. The results from this robust data set build upon past integrated seismic-well studies that strive to improve the understanding of MTC processes and their implications in hydrocarbon exploration across salt sedimentary basins.
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