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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received October 11, 1996; revised manuscript
received June 16, 1998; final acceptance July 14, 1998.
23704 Bryson Drive, Frisco, Texas 75035.
3Department of Geological Sciences, Southern Methodist University,
Dallas, Texas 75275.
ABSTRACT
The Anadarko basin of Oklahoma is a two-stage Paleozoic cratonic basin
with as much as 12 km (7.5 mi) or more of sedimentary fill. We present
a present-day thermal model of the basin based on lithologic analysis at
3-m (10-ft) intervals in 63 wells, heat flow measurements at seven sites,
and in-situ thermal conductivity calibration of the sediment section at
two sites. We do not use BHT (bottom-hole temperature) information in the
process, but we do, at the end of the process, compare the independently
predicted temperatures to BHT information. The in-situ calibration of thermal
conductivity was accomplished using detailed temperature logs and represents
a new practical application for evaluating basin thermal characteristics.
Shale exerts the most control on the temperature distribution because it
is the most abundant lithology and has the lowest thermal conductivity.
Shale comprises 47% by volume of rock in the basin and represents 75% of
total thermal resistance, directly related to temperature gradient; therefore,
shale dominates the thermal structure of the basin. Thus, the problems
in sampling and in characterizing the in-situ thermal conductivity of shale
from laboratory measurements represent a major limitation in basin thermal
analysis; we use the in-situ calibration approach as a way to address the
difficulty. The temperatures calculated do not mimic the structure of the
sediments; i.e., the hottest area on a given age horizon in the lower Paleozoic
is not in the most deeply buried part of the Anadarko basin. The combination
of decreasing heat flow toward the Wichita Mountains and the facies changes
in the Pennsylvanian units from marine shale (low thermal conductivity)
in the basin to the granite wash (high thermal conductivity) toward the
uplift results in the highest temperatures being displaced about 50 km
(31 mi) northward into the basin. The pattern of vitrinite reflectance
in the Woodford Shale is virtually identical to the present-day reconstructed
temperature pattern; therefore, we conclude that the thermal pattern is
and has been dominated by conductive heat transport.
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