Sedimentary Facies Recovered from Amazon Fan during ODP Leg 155: I. Implications for Depositional Processes and Sand-Body Distribution: ABSTRACT

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 80 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. R. Normark, J. E. Damuth, R. D.
2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 404-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Shuang Hu ◽  
Si Miao Zhu

A big tendency in oil industry is underestimating the heterogeneity of the reservoir and overestimating the connectivity, which results in overly optimistic estimates of the capacity. With the development of seismic attributes, we could pick up hidden reservoir lithology and physical property information from the actual seismic data, strengthen seismic data application in actual work, to ensure the objectivity of the results. In this paper, the channel sand body distribution in south eighth district of oilfield Saertu is predicted through seismic data root-mean-square amplitude and frequency division to identify sand body boundaries, predict the distribution area channel sand body characteristics successfully, which consistent with the sedimentary facies distribution. The result proves that seismic attribute analysis has good practicability in channel sand body prediction and sedimentary facies description.


2015 ◽  
Vol 733 ◽  
pp. 92-95
Author(s):  
Jia Hui Wang ◽  
Hong Sheng Lv

The main purpose of lithofacies modeling is to get the actual reservoir lithofacies skeleton model which is maximum approximation of the underground reservoir. The facies model can effectively solve the problem of predicting sand bodies between wells. At the same time, we still use the stochastic modeling method to build the facies model of unconstrained single well simulation and sedimentary facies controlled constrained simulation. We elected the model which is most consistent to the actual geological conditions, providing theoretical guidance for characterizing the interwell sand body distribution law and improving the accuracy of predicting sand bodies between wells, laiding the foundation for further exploration and development of oil reservoir.


2013 ◽  
Vol 340 ◽  
pp. 920-923
Author(s):  
Xiang Xing ◽  
Feng Cai ◽  
Wang Shui Hu

The paper studied the sedimentary system of No.1 and No.2 structure in Nanpu oil field with methods of geological, logging, seismic and chemical analysis, associated with core characteristics, sedimentary structure, profile structure and logging facies. The results demonstrate the following three points. First, Minghuazhen Formation in Nanpu field is meandering river sedimentary, and the channel subphase can be further divided into channel bottom lag deposits, beach, abandoned channel and natural levee. Second, the isopach and sedimentary face map of Minghuazhen Formation are generated based on each well's thickness of sand body and curve characteristics, and show the trend of North West and South West distribution. Third, sand body distribution can be predicted though spatial distribution of sedimentary face. And linear reservoir and Barrage-type reservoir are the two typical zones of Minghuazhen Formation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamoumi Naima ◽  
choukri chacrone ◽  
Silvia Spezzaferri

The sedimentary deposits of Eocene-Miocene Mrayt Group, North-Western Rif, Morocco has been the subject of controversy by previous authors regarding their depositional environment. Detailed sedimentological study based on petrographic and sedimentary facies analysis, ichnofacies interpretation and paleocurrent measurements, leads to several results and new insights. Petrographic study provided the first evidence of mixed siliciclastic and carbonate sediments and their nomenclature: silty micrites, micritic siltstones, micritic sandstones, sandy micrite, and allochemic sandstones, as well as the nature of the sources and its geological context. Twenty two sedimentary facies that have never been described before are identified, and based on their succession and association a new interpretation of depositional processes and depositional systems are proposed. The paleoenvironments of the Mrayt Group are interpreted as littoral and shallow marine settings: tides- dominated estuary, tides-dominated delta systems and open coast tidal flat, under complex hydrodynamics strongly influenced by river discharge, tidal currents, waves and storms action.Sedimentation occurred in “the Maghrebian basin” under the interplay of: i) tectonics related to the Cenozoic collision of the African and Eurasian continental plates, ii) Cenozoic alternation of warm climate and cooling due to the increasing influence of Antarctica glaciation, iii) sediments supplies induced by rejuvenation of sedimentary sources and iv) sea level fluctuation related to the advance and retreat of ice-sheet on Antarctica.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. T265-T282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katelynn M. Smith ◽  
John H. McBride ◽  
Stephen T. Nelson ◽  
R. William Keach ◽  
Samuel M. Hudson ◽  
...  

Pilot Valley, located in the eastern Basin and Range, Western Utah, USA, contains numerous shorelines and depositional remnants of Late Pleistocene Lake Bonneville. These remnants present excellent ground-penetrating radar (GPR) targets due to their coherent stratification, low-clay, low-salinity, and low moisture content. Three-dimensional GPR imaging can resolve fine-scale stratigraphy of these deposits down to a few centimeters, and when combined with detailed outcrop characterization, it provides an in-depth look at the architecture of these deposits. On the western side of Pilot Valley, a well-preserved late Pleistocene gravel bar records shoreline depositional processes associated with the Provo (or just post-Provo) shoreline period. GPR data, measured stratigraphic sections, cores, paleontological sampling for paleoecology and radiocarbon dating, and mineralogical analysis permit a detailed reconstruction of the depositional environment of this well-exposed prograding gravel bar. Contrary to other described Bonneville shoreline deposits, calibrated radiocarbon ages ranging from 16.5 to 14.3 (ka, BP) indicate that the bar was stable and active during an overall regressive stage of the lake, as it dropped from the Provo shoreline (or just post-Provo level). Our study provides a model for an ancient pluvial lakeshore depositional environment in the Basin and Range province and suggests that stable, progradational bedforms common to the various stages of Lake Bonneville are likely not all associated with periods of shoreline stability, as is commonly assumed. The high-resolution GPR visualization demonstrates the high degree of compartmentalization possible for a potential subsurface reservoir target based on ancient shoreline sedimentary facies.


1994 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mar�a Gabriela M�ngano ◽  
Luis Alberto Buatois ◽  
Xiantao Wu ◽  
Junmin Sun ◽  
Guocheng Zhang

Author(s):  
T. J. Coulthard ◽  
M. J. Van De Wiel

Over the last few decades, a suite of numerical models has been developed for studying river history and evolution that is almost as diverse as the subject of river history itself. A distinction can be made between landscape evolution models (LEMs), alluvial architecture models, meander models, cellular models and computational fluid dynamics models. Although these models share some similarities, there also are notable differences between them, which make them more or less suitable for simulating particular aspects of river history and evolution. LEMs embrace entire drainage basins at the price of detail; alluvial architecture models simulate sedimentary facies but oversimplify flow characteristics; and computational fluid dynamics models have to assume a fixed channel form. While all these models have helped us to predict erosion and depositional processes as well as fluvial landscape evolution, some areas of prediction are likely to remain limited and short-term owing to the often nonlinear response of fluvial systems. Nevertheless, progress in model algorithms, computing and field data capture will lead to greater integration between these approaches and thus the ability to interpret river history more comprehensively.


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