Abstract

The Huasna district, an area of approximately 100 square miles, lies at the southern end of the Santa Lucia Range in the California Coast Range province about 12 miles northeast of the town of Santa Maria. Geologically it consists of a synclinal basin filled with Miocene sediments and interbedded volcanics. The basin is roughly limited on the east and west by two nearly parallel faults. On or near these boundaries Miocene strata are found in fault or depositional contact with Franciscan rocks on the west and Cretaceous sediments on the east. Anticlines have formed on the flanks of the major syncline. Middle and upper Miocene (Monterey) shales and sands crop out along the eastern flank of the syncline. Basinward they are overlain by 2,000 feet of Santa Margarita sands and shales. Wells drilled within the deeper portion of the basin penetrate 4,000-6,500 feet of brown cherty and siliceous shales and dark brown calcareous shales representing all the foraminiferal stages from upper Mohnian to Relizian. Shows of tarry oil occur throughout this interval both in outcrop and in wells, probably accounting for many of the shows of oil recorded by early tests in the district. At and throughout the basal portion of this predominantly shale section volcanic interbeds of tuff, agglomerate and ashy sands of middle and lower Miocene (Saucesian ?) age are encountered. Incomplete records on earlier wells and lack of deep stratigraphic penetration in more than one well near the center of the basin lead to some conjecture as to the nature and distribution of lower Miocene sediments. Thirty-five wells have been drilled in the Huasna district since 1898. Two or three wells have produced a small amount of oil. The Barneberg No. 2, drilled on the Tar Springs anticline, has produced 11,400 barrels of 16 degrees A.P.I. oil, which appears to have come from near the Santa Margarita-Monterey gradational contact and from within the underlying locally fractured shales. Recent wells drilled nearby failed to develop production. The possibilities of stratigraphic traps at depth within the basin and of better structural position on some of the asymmetric anticlines are indicated as being the objectives of future exploration in the district. End_of_Article - Last_Page 2630------------

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