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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Exploitation of Thin Basin-floor Fan Sandstones, Navarro Formation (Upper Cretaceous), South Texas
By
ChevronTexaco
North America Upstream
During thirty years of industry drilling in the Paleocene Lobo Trend of South Texas, thin sandstones of the Upper Cretaceous Navarro Formation have been regarded as a high-risk secondary objective that occasionally pays the cost of drilling an additional 1,000 feet to test it. Several recent completions have yielded impressive sustained flow rates in excess of 1 million cubic feet of gas per day (MMCFGPD) per vertical foot of reservoir, therefore justifying an effort to better understand its occurrence.
The Navarro reservoir in southern Webb and northern Zapata
Counties is a thin sporadically-occurring sand encased in deepwater
shales that occurs basinward of the Cretaceous shelf
margin. It is interpreted as a basin-floor fan based on log character
and paleontologic bathymetric analysis. The sand averages 10
feet in thickness and cannot be resolved seismically as a discrete
event, however, areas favorable for sand accumulation can be
predicted using
seismic
attributes
derived from 3-D volumes.
Where the sand thickness exceeds 15 feet a good correlation exists
with the amplitude value of the
seismic
peak associated with the
sand top. However, in most areas the sand is thinner and accommodation
space in subtle intrabasinal
depressions can be inferred by 3-D isochron
mapping. Most areas that have Navarro sand
correlate with isochron thicks; however, not
all isochron thicks have sand, most likely
because sediment supply was less than the
available accommodation space. These
attributes
should be applicable in other areas
in which
seismic
resolution of a sand body is difficult.
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