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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

DOI: 10.1306/10252221113

Previous HitSequenceNext Hit stratigraphic architecture of the Lower Triassic Montney Formation, northeastern British Columbia, Canada

Greg M. Baniak,1 Thomas F. Moslow,2 Stavros Michailides,3 and Matthew G. Adams4

1PETRONAS Canada, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
2PETRONAS Canada, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
3Moslow Geoscience Consulting Ltd., Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
4PETRONAS Canada, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; [email protected]
5University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

The Lower Triassic Montney Formation in western Canada is the third largest unconventional natural gas deposit globally. The project area lies at the basinward limit of subsurface deposition and exhibits a wide degree of heterogeneity. Four stratigraphic sequences bounded by either coplanar Previous HitsequenceNext Hit boundary–flooding surfaces or their correlative conformities are recognized in the Montney and overlying Sunset Prairie Formation and are matched to global Triassic substages. These sequences and substages include Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 1 (Griesbachian–Dienerian, lower Montney), Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 2 (Smithian, middle Montney), Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 3 (Spathian, upper Montney), and Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 4 (Anisian, Sunset Prairie). Previous HitSequenceNext Hit 1 consists of a retrogradational to aggradational set of distal ramp parasequences. Previous HitSequenceNext Hit 2 is composed of prograding mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp parasequences. Previous HitSequenceNext Hit 3 is made up of two distinct successions. The lower interval reflects deposition in offshore environments during onlap, whereas the overlying interval is an offlapping set of shoreface parasequences. Previous HitSequenceNext Hit 4 was deposited within an offshore to lower shoreface setting.

With petrophysical logs, subsurface core, and biostratigraphic data, higher-resolution parasequences may be identified within each of these four sequences. Previous HitSequenceNext Hit 1 can be further subdivided into three parasequence sets (LmA–LmC) and one separate parasequence (LmD), Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 2 into four parasequence sets (MmA–MmD) and one separate parasequence (MmE), Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 3 into five parasequence sets (Um1–UmC), and Previous HitsequenceNext Hit 4 into one large parasequence unit (Am1). Understanding these different parasequences and their spatial distribution is critical when considering variations in static reservoir properties and their relation to dynamic Previous HitwellTop performance.

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