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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 98, No. 7 (July 2014), PP. 14011429.

Copyright copy2014. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI: 10.1306/01201413106

Distribution of discontinuous mudstone beds within wave-dominated shallow-marine deposits: Star Point Sandstone and Blackhawk Formation, Eastern Utah

Christian Haug Eide,1 John Howell,2 and Simon Buckley3

1University of Bergen, Department of Earth Science, P.O. Box 7803, 5020 Bergen, Norway; Uni Research CIPR, P.O. Box 8710, 5020 Bergen, Norway; [email protected]
2Uni Research CIPR, P.O. Box 8710, 5020 Bergen, Norway; present address: University of Aberdeen, School of Geosciences, Aberdeen, AB24 3UE, Scotland; [email protected]
3Uni Research CIPR, P.O. Box 8710, 5020 Bergen, Norway; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

Deposits of wave-dominated shorelines are typically considered to act as relatively simple hydrocarbon reservoirs and are commonly modeled as “tanks of sand.” However, important heterogeneities that can act as barriers to fluid flow occur at the parasequence, bedset, and bed scales, especially in viscous oil or low-permeability oil fields. Heterogeneities at the parasequence and bedset scales have been well studied, but discontinuous mudstone beds occurring within the shoreface have received little attention. The Book Cliffs and Wasatch Plateau are among the best-exposed and best-studied deposits of wave-dominated shallow-marine systems in the world. Two parasequences within these outcrops have been studied in detail to investigate the distributions of intrashoreface shales and to propose models for the controls on their distribution. A data set consisting of 30 km (18.6 mi) of virtual outcrops derived from oblique helicopter-mounted light detection and ranging (LIDAR) scanning with supporting stratigraphic sections makes it possible to collect a large quantity of accurate geometric data of depositional elements from inaccessible cliffs.

Nine-hundred and twenty-one discontinuous mudstone beds were measured. These occur as ellipses with long axes oriented normal to the paleoshoreline. Lengths and widths of these mudstone beds exhibit a lognormal distribution, with means of 21.9 and 13.8 m (71.9 and 45.3 ft), respectively. Within the shoreface succession, the number of mudstone beds increases downward whereas size does not vary significantly with stratigraphic height. An average of 100 m (328 ft) cumulative length of shale exists per 100 m (328 ft) of horizontal outcrop; this increases threefold near both wave-dominated deltas and bedset boundaries that reflect minor sea-level fluctuations during progradation.

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