Advances in Estimating the Geologic CO2 Storage Capacity of the Madison Limestone and Weber Sandstone on the Rock Springs Uplift by Utilizing Detailed 3-D Reservoir Characterization and Geologic Uncertainty Reduction

Author(s):  
Zunsheng Jiao ◽  
Ronald C. Surdam
2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 1504-1512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas A. Buscheck ◽  
Joshua A. White ◽  
Susan A. Carroll ◽  
Jeffrey M. Bielicki ◽  
Roger D. Aines

By removing brine from a reservoir prior to storing CO2, storage capacity can be increased by nearly an equivalent volume.


2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 91-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donna Anderson ◽  
Mark Longman

A new interpretation of the subsurface geometries of the Ordovician Bighorn Dolomite and overlying Devonian strata across southwestern Wyoming arises from revising the stratigraphy in a core from the Mountain Fuel Supply UPRR #11–19–104–4 well drilled on the crest of the Rock Springs Uplift in 1962. One of only a few wells to penetrate all or part of the Lower Paleozoic succession in the subsurface of southwestern Wyoming, the well was almost continuously cored through the Devonian–Cambrian succession. From a reinterpretation of the stratigraphy in the core, 22 ft of Bighorn Dolomite is recognized based on the characteristic Thalassinoides bioturbation fabric in skeletal dolowackestone typical of Late Ordovician subtidal carbonate facies ranging from Nevada to Greenland along the western margin of the Great American Carbonate Bank. This lithology is in complete contrast with the alternating dolomitic flat-pebble conglomerate and dolomudstone of the underlying Cambrian Gallatin Limestone and the cyclical units of brecciated anhydritic dolomudstone and quartzose sandstone of the overlying Devonian Lower Member of the Jefferson Formation. Stratigraphic re-interpretation yields insights regarding Ordovician–Devonian stratal geometries across southwestern Wyoming. More widespread than previously portrayed, the Bighorn Dolomite pinches out on the eastern flank of the Rock Springs Uplift. Similar to past interpretations, Devonian strata pinch out east of the Rock Springs Uplift at Table Rock Field. A true-geometry multi-datumed stratigraphic cross section yields insights not obtainable by mapping. Regionally, top truncation of stratigraphic units below the base-Madison Limestone unconformity normally progresses stratigraphically deeper eastward. However, in southwestern Wyoming, the Devonian Lower Member of the Jefferson Formation overlaps the older Bighorn Dolomite by marked onlap across the Rock Springs Uplift and then pinches out by top truncation/onlap near Table Rock Field, forming an “abnormal” overlap relationship along the northern margin of the Transcontinental Arch. The underlying Bighorn Dolomite shows little to no onlap onto the underlying Cambrian section, but is markedly top truncated below the Lower Member of the Jefferson Formation. Comparing proportions of onlap versus top truncation for the two formations constrains the timing of two successive upwarping episodes along the northern margin of the Transcontinental Arch across southwestern Wyoming. The first is arguably Middle Devonian, and the second spans the Devonian–Mississippian boundary. Two subtle and different angular unconformities created by these two episodes imply a persistent fold or tilt axis that sequentially was reactivated along the northern margin of the Transcontinental Arch in southwestern Wyoming.


Geophysics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. B1-B12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josiane Pafeng ◽  
Subhashis Mallick ◽  
Hema Sharma

Applying seismic inversion to estimate subsurface elastic earth properties for reservoir characterization is a challenge in exploration seismology. In recent years, waveform-based seismic inversions have gained popularity, but due to high computational costs, their applications are limited, and amplitude-variation-with-offset/angle inversion is still the current state-of-the-art. We have developed a genetic-algorithm-based prestack seismic waveform inversion methodology. By parallelizing at multiple levels and assuming a locally 1D structure such that forward computation of wave equation synthetics is computationally efficient, this method is capable of inverting 3D prestack seismic data on parallel computers. Applying this inversion to a real prestack seismic data volume from the Rock Springs Uplift (RSU) located in Wyoming, USA, we determined that our method is capable of inverting the data in a reasonable runtime and producing much higher quality results than amplitude-variation-with-offset/angle inversion. Because the primary purpose for seismic data acquisition at the RSU was to characterize the subsurface for potential targets for carbon dioxide sequestration, we also identified and analyzed some potential primary and secondary storage formations and their associated sealing lithologies from our inversion results.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 ◽  
pp. 4697-4709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordan Kearns ◽  
Gary Teletzke ◽  
Jeffrey Palmer ◽  
Hans Thomann ◽  
Haroon Kheshgi ◽  
...  

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