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Abstract

G. P. Eberli, J. L. Masaferro, and J. F. ldquoRickrdquo Sarg, 2004, Seismic imaging of carbonate reservoirs and systems: AAPG Memoir 81, p. 107-122.

Copyright copy2004. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

Three-Dimensional Seismic Imaging and Previous HitReservoirNext Hit Modeling of an Upper Paleozoic ldquoReefalrdquo Buildup, Reinecke Field, West Texas, United States

Arthur H. Saller,1 Skip Walden,1 Steve Robertson,2 Robert Nims,2 Joe Schwab,2 Hiroshi Hagiwara,3 Shigeharu Mizohata4

1Unocal Corporation, Sugar Land, Texas, U.S.A.
2Pure Resources, Midland, Texas, U.S.A.
3Japan National Oil Company, Chiba, Japan; Present address: Japan Oil Development Company, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
4Japan National Oil Company, Chiba, Japan

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This chapter describes part of the results of a joint Unocal-Japan National Oil Company Previous HitreservoirNext Hit Previous HitcharacterizationNext Hit project. Many people from both companies helped in this work, including Merle Steckel, Brian Ball, Stan Frost, John Gogas, Phil Johnston, and Tim Anderson. Constructive reviews by Steve Bachtel, Charlie Kerans, and Jose Luis Masaferro greatly improved this manuscript. We thank Japan National Oil Company and Unocal for the permission to publish this chapter.

ABSTRACT

Reinecke field is an upper Pennsylvanian to lowest Permian carbonate buildup in the southern part of the Horseshoe Atoll, west Texas, United States. The field and surrounding areas have been imaged with three 3-D seismic surveys and penetrated by many wells. Although Reinecke is commonly referred to as a reefal Previous HitreservoirNext Hit, deposition occurred in stratified sequences, 50ndash100 ft (15ndash30 m) thick, dominated by wackestones, packstones, and grainstones. Boundstones (mainly rich in phylloid algae) constitute only 16% of the buildup. Seismic reflectors within the buildup parallel sequence boundaries and are truncated at the margins of the buildup. Three-dimensional seismic surveys show that the top of the Reinecke buildup is highly irregular with more than 470 ft (143 m) of relief. Deep-marine shales overlie the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit and act as a seal for this stratigraphic trap. Reinecke's irregular, mounded morphology is the result of localized carbonate growth and erosional truncation. Much of the erosional truncation probably occurred in a deep-marine environment.

Reinecke's south dome acts a single continuous Previous HitreservoirNext Hit dominated by limestone (70%) with 25% dolomite. Limestone porosity is generally 5ndash18% (average of 11.2%) and permeability is 1ndash1000 md (average of 166 md). Dolomite porosity is lower (average of 8.3%), but permeability is higher (average of 894 md). Discontinuous low-permeability layers parallel to stratification serve as low-permeability baffles; however, patchy replacive dolomites cut through stratification and act as high-permeability vertical conduits. Good Previous HitreservoirNext Hit continuity, low-permeability baffles, and artificially enhanced bottom-water drive helped to recover more than 50% of the original oil in place. Excellent vertical Previous HitreservoirNext Hit continuity has allowed implementation of a crestal CO2 flood at Reinecke field. CO2 is being injected into the top of the structure, displacing residual and bypassed mobile oil downward for recovery in lower parts of the Previous HitreservoirTop.

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