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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 48, No. 6, February 2006. Pages 37-37.

Abstract: Structural Architecture, Petroleum Systems and Geological Implications for the New Hydrocarbon Province of the Covenant Field Discovery, Sevier County, Utah

By

Douglas K Strickland1, Keith Johnson1, John Vrona1, Dan Schelling2, and Dave Wavrek3
1 Wolverine Gas and Oil
2 Structural Geology International
3 Petroleum Systems International

Structural analysis, seismic interpretation and organic geochemistry are all part of the petroleum systems synthesis that contributes to the Covenant Field discovery in Central Utah by Wolverine Gas and Oil Corporation. The Kings Meadow Ranch 17-1 penetrated a highly porous and permeable reservoir in the Jurassic Navajo Sandstone, which contains a 450-foot oil column. The Covenant Field is located along a frontal structural uplift of the Central Utah thrust belt, where Late Cretaceous- Early Tertiary compressional deformation resulted in the development of thrust faults and associated hanging wall anticlines buttressed against the ancestral Ephraim extensional fault. The traps are charged from Mississippian foreland basin sediments to the west of the discovery. Hydrocarbon generation was driven by initial sedimentary loading (oil generation) followed by tectonic loading (gas generation) associated with the evolving thrust belt. Evaporite deposition in the overlying Arapien formation provides a highly effective seal for the accumulations. Jurassic extensional faults may be critical in defining the location of thrust faults and antiformal stacks, which in turn define structural traps along this newly discovered onshore hydrocarbon province.

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