Abstract
The name formation is applied to the non-marine red bed facies of a group of sedimentary rocks up to 7,500 feet thick. They range in age from upper Eocene into lower Miocene in the southern and eastern part of the Ventura basin but are probably confined to the Oligocene in most of the northwestern part of that basin. The lower portion becomes progressively marine westward beginning about 25 miles west of Santa Barbara, however, this marine Oligocene is mainly sandstone, low in organic material, and can hardly be a source rock. The bulk of the evidence suggests that most of the oil was derived from Eocene shales. Upward migration across the bedding of several hundred to a few thousand feet of predominantly sandy strata seems to be required. Countless minor joints and cracks in the shaly interbeds are suggested as the principal channels of upward migration. In the southeastern part of the Ventura basin, some of the oil may have reached the lower, or Eocene portion of the Sespe by lateral migration from upper Eocene shales into which the lower Sespe may grade, followed by upward migration within the anticlines to the shalier middle Sespe where it is trapped. End_of_Article - Last_Page 2089------------
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