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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

West Texas Geological Society

Abstract


The Permian Basin: Preserving Our Past – Securing Our Future, 2002
Pages 71-87

Applications of Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitSeismicNext Hit to Exploration and Development of Carbonate Reservoirs: South Cowden Grayburg Field, West Texas

Stephen C. Ruppel, Yong Joon Park, F. J. Lucia

Abstract

Previous Hit3-DNext Hit geophysical Previous HitdataNext Hit can be a powerful tool for identifying and characterizing oil and gas reservoirs. However, successful application of Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit technology in carbonate platform successions has lagged its use in clastic reservoirs. Here we present the results of an integrated study of outcrops, cores, wireline logs, and Previous Hit3-DNext Hit geophysical Previous HitdataNext Hit in a Permian (Guadalupian) platform carbonate reservoir on the Central Basin Platform of the Permian Basin which demonstrate the use of Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit both as a tool for identifying the structural controls on reservoir development and for defining the distribution of diagenetically developed reservoir porosity.

The South Cowden Grayburg reservoir resembles many Permian carbonate reservoirs in the Permian Basin of West Texas in being composed of cyclic, shallow-marine, platform carbonates. It differs from most, however, in that the most productive areas of the reservoir owe their high productivity to enhanced porosity and permeability development caused by anhydrite dissolution and diagenesis. Preliminary analysis of Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit shows that even simple mapping of Previous HitseismicNext Hit amplitudes can greatly improve our understanding of the distribution of reservoir properties.

Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataTop also show that both the structural configuration of the field and the distribution of depositional facies are the result of accommodation patterns created by the deposition of a clastic-rich lowstand prograding wedge that built basinward from the terminal Clear Fork platform margin during late Leonardian (San Andres) sea level fall. Reconnaissance studies along the margin of the Central Basin Platform suggests that other Grayburg reservoirs may owe their development to lowstand wedges formed at this time.


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