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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received April 20, 1998;
revised manuscript received January 25, 1999; final acceptance February
18, 1999.
2Baylor University, Department of
Geology, Waco, Texas 76798-7354; e-mail: [email protected]
3Exxon Exploration Company, P.O. Box
4778, Houston, Texas 77210-4778.
4Exxon Production Research Company,
P.O. Box 2189, Houston, Texas 77252-2189.
ABSTRACT
Facies and reservoir distribution is largely controlled
by antecedent topography. Structural highs generated during the terminal
phase of Ouachita-Marathon compression were the preferred site of intertidal
facies deposition. Adjacent structural lows have a higher proportion of
reservoir-prone subtidal facies. Analysis of compensated-neutron log porosity
indicates that subtidal-prone intervals may be broadly characterized as
having less than 11% porosity, whereas intertidal-prone intervals generally
exceed 11% porosity. From this observation, a simple computer algorithm
allows facies interpretation within wells lacking core. Intertidal-subtidal
facies ratio maps generated from this algorithm closely match the distribution
of pre-Wolfcampian structural elements and present-day structure. Intertidal
facies are more common across the crest of structural highs.
Future drilling in the North Jenkins area should
pursue structural-flank positions where subtidal facies are volumetrically
more abundant. Care should be taken, however, to avoid completions below
the composite oil-water contact. Subtidal facies are compartmentalized
within individual sequences of a progradational sequence set. Progradational
stacking and compactional drape over deeper structures produces discrete
flow units with potentially independent oil-water contacts.
Through the collaborative efforts of a multidisciplinary
team, various subsurface data types have been integrated to produce a conceptual
geologic model for reservoir prediction within the upper Clear Fork and
Glorieta formations of the Robertson field area, west Texas. Detailed description
of 1434 m of core, 109 thin sections, and 241 line-kilometers of 2-D (two-dimensional)
seismic indicates the stratigraphic interval accumulated as a progradational
succession of platform-interior subtidal and intertidal facies. Reservoir
intervals preferentially occur within subtidal facies having intercrystalline
porosity associated with replacement by coarsely crystalline dolomite.
Intertidal facies were replaced by a finely crystalline phase of fabric-preserving
dolomite and are dominated by an ineffective fenestral pore system.
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