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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Applying
Deltaic
and Shallow Marine Outcrop Analogs
to the Subsurface
Deltaic
and Shallow Marine Outcrop Analogs
to the SubsurfaceBy
A fundamental problem in subsurface reservoir characterization is determining the continuity of flow units and flow barriers. Flow units and barriers exist on a variety of scales from field-wide to interwell to wellbore.
Outcrop analog studies and databases are used to develop models for
- regional and field-scale reservoir and nonreservoir elements
associated with shallow marine,
deltaic
reservoir types - detailed 3D facies architecture of small-scale, intrawell heterogeneity (cements and “stochastic” shales) in specific depositional subenvironments (e.g., delta front facies) that may be incorporated into reservoir models
- conceptual reevaluations of shoreline and
deltaic
facies that may
be applied by geologists interpreting or correlating seismic, well
log or core data.
The subsurface geologist must use facies models and sequence
stratigraphy concepts to correlate well data. Several examples of
deltaic
reservoirs
that consist of horizontal layers are described.
Outcrop examples suggest that delta front sandstones are not
horizontal but dip seaward. This recognition challenges many
current reservoir models that assume flat-lying beds and affects
how we correlate core and well log data. On the regional scale, the
analogs suggest very different exploration models are required to
search for basin-distal reservoir sandstones.
From the perspective of general facies models, historically
shorefaces have been assumed to form homogenous, uniform
reservoirs
that require little effort to produce. Production histories,
however, show that this assumption is not valid for many
so-called shoreface-type
reservoirs
. Many reservoir units identified
as wave-dominated shorefaces are actually delta front
deposits. This new model for wave-influenced coastlines suggests
a distinct facies asymmetry, with homogenous beach and
shoreface sands accumulating on the updrift side of the river
mouth and significantly more heterogeneous facies on the downdrift
side. The new model was used to reinterpret Cretaceous
“shoreface” deposits in Wyoming, New Mexico and Utah and
should be applicable to subsurface
deltaic
reservoirs
elsewhere.
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