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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 79 (1995)

Issue: 7. (July)

First Page: 1019

Last Page: 1042

Title: Stratigraphic Architecture of the Tonganoxie Paleovalley Fill (Lower Virgilian) in Northeastern Kansas

Author(s): Howard R. Feldman (2), Martin R. Gibling (3), Allen W. Archer (4), Winton G. Wightman (3), William P. Lanier (5)

Abstract:

Lower Pennsylvanian paleovalley-confined sandstones are important petroleum reservoirs in the Midwest. In Kansas, such reservoirs have produced approximately 220 million bbl of oil and 1.7 tcf of gas. Valley-fill successions tend to become muddy upward, but there can be considerable local heterogeneity in which reservoir sandstones pass laterally into muddy sandstones or nonreservoir shales. The lack of understanding of this reservoir heterogeneity can lead to low drilling success rates. The Tonganoxie paleovalley (Upper Pennsylvanian, northeastern Kansas) contains facies very similar to Lower Pennsylvanian (Morrowan) valley fills, and can provide an outcrop- and subsurface-based model of sandstone deposition.

The Tonganoxie paleovalley was incised during lowered sea level and filled during the subsequent transgression. The main paleovalley is approximately 41 m deep, 11 km wide, and 240 km long, and was fed by 1-km-wide tributary valleys oriented roughly normal to the trunk valley. Sandstones occur in four distinct architectural elements that were deposited during different phases of transgression. Type I sandstone consists of a belt of sandstone and conglomerate 3-18 m thick and confined to the trunk valley and wider portions of tributary valleys. Type I sandstone consists of amalgamated channel fills, has little or no mud, and has the highest porosity and permeability. The type I sandstone is overlain by estuarine deposits of sandstone (type II sandstones), rippled argillaceous sandstone to sandy mudstone, and coal. Most of the paleovalley was filled during this stage. The type II sandstones are narrow (1.5 km wide) arcuate bodies up to 8 km long and were likely deposited in tidal point bars near the fluvial to tidal transition, are either isolated sandstone bodies or are incised into type I sandstone. The higher mud content is expected to reduce porosity and permeability compared to fluvial facies. Type III sandstone bodies occur at the upstream limits of narrow tributaries and are probably bay-head deltas. Well logs indicate a range of mud content. Type IV sandstone is a thin (3 m) discontinuous sheet of marine sandstone deposited after most of the paleovalley had been filled.

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