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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
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Siliciclastics of the Yates Formation (Permian, upper Guadalupian) are significant hydrocarbon reservoirs in the United States Permian basin. Subsurface and outcrop data show that the most porous lithofacies occur in a clastic-dominated middle shelf and that evaporitic inner shelf and
carbonate
outer shelf equivalents are mostly nonporous.
Lithofacies relations and much of the heterogeneity in Yates reservoirs are related to the stacking of depositional sequences (i.e., siliciclastic-
carbonate
alternations and sandstone-argillaceous siltstone alternations) in response to three orders of orbitally forced, low-amplitude, eustatic variation. In general, siliciclastics dominated the Yates shelf during lowstand parts of asymmetric, 400-k.y.
sea
level
fluctuations, whereas carbonates were deposited during
sea
level
highstands. The character and position of sand depocenters on the Yates shelf during these lowstands were controlled by a longer duration third-order
sea
level
variation. Shorter duration
cycles
controlled the heterogeneity within the 400-k.y. depositional sequences. The variation in cycle packaging, lithology, and
reservoir quality between the Central Basin platform and Northwest shelf may be a response of eustatic variation on parts of the shelf with different slopes or subsidence profiles.
The lithofacies described from the Yates Formation and the depositional model proposed to explain the stratigraphy may be valuable as analogs in other basins containing mixed siliciclastic-
carbonate
settings.
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