About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract

Plates referenced in text included in PDF.

AAPG Studies in Geology No. 50, (Section Title: Reservoir Permeability, Modeling, and Simulation Studies) Chapter 13: Geologic Framework, Facies, Paleogeography, and Reservoir Analogs of the Ferron Sandstone in the Ivie Creek Area, East-Central Utah, by Paul B. Anderson, Thomas C. Chidsey, Jr., Thomas A. Ryer, Roy D. Adams, and Kevin McClure, Pages 331 - 358
from:
AAPG Studies in Geology No. 50: Regional to Wellbore Analog for Fluvial-Deltaic Reservoir Modeling: The Ferron Sandstone of Utah, Edited by Thomas C. Chidsey, Jr., Roy D. Adams, and Thomas H. Morris
Copyright © 2004 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists and the Society of Exploration Geophysicists. All rights reserved.

Reservoir Permeability, Modeling, and Simulation Studies

Chapter 13:
Geologic Framework, Facies, Paleogeography, and Reservoir Analogs of the Ferron Sandstone in the Ivie Creek Area, East-Central Utah

Paul B. Anderson1, Thomas C. Chidsey, Jr.2, Thomas A. Ryer3, Roy D. Adams4, and Kevin McClure2
1Consulting Geologist, Salt Lake City, Utah
2Utah Geological Survey, Salt Lake City, Utah
3The ARIES Group, Inc., Katy, Texas
4A&R Resources, LLC., Salt Lake City, Utah


ABSTRACT

The Ferron Sandstone of east-central Utah has world-class outcrops of dominantly fluvial-deltaic, Turonian-Coniacian-aged strata deposited along the margins of the rapidly subsiding Cretaceous foreland basin. The Ferron consists of a series of stacked, transgressive-regressive cycles which form an eastward-thinning wedge. The Ivie Creek area contains abrupt facies changes in two of these cycles referred to as Kf-1 and Kf-2.

Kf-1 consists of unusual river-dominated delta deposits that prograde southeast to northwest across the Ivie Creek area. Progradation is parallel or onshore to the regional shoreline trend. Distinctive, steeply inclined bedsets or clinoforms, defined by bounding surfaces are classified into four facies: proximal, medial, distal, and cap. Clinoform facies are based on grain size, sedimentary structures, bedding thickness, inclination angle, and stratigraphic position. These deposits accumulated on an arcuate delta lobe which was prograding into a deeper water, fully marine bay. The main delta, which we interpret to have been located to the east and northeast, created a protected embayment in the northwest part of the Ivie Creek area. The Kf-1 clinoforms represent deposition into the embayment fed by river channels from the southeast.

Kf-2 is represented by wave-modified deltaic deposits that generally coarsen east to west, and consist of shoreface and distributary complex facies. These relatively clean, sand-rich deposits accumulated along a local north-south shoreline trend defined by a landward pinchout of marine shoreface facies, as opposed to the more common regional northwest-southeast shoreline trend recognized in other Ferron cycles above and below Kf-2. In the western part of the Ivie Creek area, east- to northeast-flowing distributary channels deposited large amounts of sand in north-south-trending distributary-mouth bars. Shallow- to moderate-depth marine conditions existed in the eastern part of the area. An uncommon transition from shoreface, to bay, to coastal plain/swamp occurred during the late stage of Kf-2 deposition.

As a reservoir analog, the Ferron Sandstone in the Ivie Creek area displays variations in sedimentary structures and lithofacies that influence both its compartmentalization and permeability. Bounding layers like those observed on outcrop were identified from core and geophysical well-log data. These features can be incorporated into reservoir models and simulations for oil field development and secondary or enhanced oil recovery programs.

Pay-Per-View Purchase Options

The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.

Watermarked PDF Document: $14
Open PDF Document: $24