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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Plates referenced in text included in PDF.
Delta
-
Plain
Point Bars Using
Ground-Penetrating Radar, Cretaceous Ferron Sandstone, Utah
from:
Reservoir Permeability, Modeling, and Simulation Studies
Chapter 17:
Three-Dimensional Architecture of Ancient Lower
Delta
-
Plain
Point Bars Using
Ground-Penetrating Radar, Cretaceous Ferron Sandstone, Utah
Rucsandra M. Corbeanu1, Michael C. Wizevich2,
Janok P. Bhattacharya3,
Xiaoxiang Zeng3, and George A. McMechan3
1Agip, The Hague, The Netherlands
2Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New
York
3Geosciences Department, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas
ABSTRACT
Accurate three-dimensional description of reservoir architecture using
outcrop analogs is hampered by limited exposure of essentially two-dimensional outcrops.
This study contains the first fully three-dimensional description of ancient
marine-influenced point bar sandstones of lower
delta
-
plain
distributary channels and is
based on the integration of detailed outcrop and drill-hole data, and twoand
three-dimensional ground-penetrating radar data. The studied outcrops are in the
Cretaceous Ferron Sandstone of east-central Utah.
Point bars deposited in marine-influenced, lower
delta
-
plain
channels show
complex facies and geometries that resemble both fluvial point bars (upward-fining
grain-size distribution and laterally stacked inclined bedsets), and tidally influenced
point bars (extensive mud drapes on the inclined bedset surfaces and upstream migration of
inclined bedsets).
The bankfull width and mean bankfull depth were estimated at 225-150 m
(738-492 ft) and at 3.9-5.2 m (12.8-17.1 ft), respectively. The heterogeneities in these
point-bar deposits include mudstone drapes on the
upper
bounding surfaces of the inclined
bedsets, and mudstone intraclast conglomerates lying on basal erosional scours of inclined
bedsets. The spatial distribution of these heterogeneities is determined by direct mapping
in outcrop in conjunction with modeling ground-penetrating radar amplitudes by
geostatistical techniques. Mudstone layers are generally 5 m (16 ft) in length in the
direction parallel to flow with a small percentage of mudstone layers 15 m (49 ft) in
length, and 10 m (33 ft) perpendicular to flow, downdip along the inclined beds. The
detailed distribution of heterogeneities inside reservoirs potentially affects flow
behaviour.
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