OIL- AND GAS-BEARING UPPER CRETACEOUS AND PALEOGENE FLUVIAL ROCKS IN CENTRAL AND NORTHEAST UTAH

Author(s):  
Thomas D. Fouch
2021 ◽  
pp. 4-10
Author(s):  
B.S. Aslanov ◽  
◽  
A.I. Khuduzade ◽  
R.A. Asgerova ◽  
Yu.F. Ismailzade ◽  
...  

Via geological-geophysical surveys carried out on the north-east border of Yevlakh-Aghjabedy downfold in the second half of the last century, the oil-gas bearing content of deeply-immersed Mesozoic horizons of Upper Cretaceous, as well as shallow layers of Paleogene and Miocene has been defined. Oil-gas bearing Productive Series have been discovered within Muradkhanly, Zardab, Shykhbaghy and Jafarli structures, which belong to Zardab-Muradkhanly-Jafarli belt. Oil-gas reservoirs are lithologically associated mainly with fractured superfusive and carbonate rocks of Upper Cretaceous, as well as sedimentary-volcanogenic rocks of Middle Eocene and partially terrigenic collectors of Maikop-Chokrak, which are layer-arch type of trap. Some researchers came to the conclusion that within favorable geological circumstances on the north-east border of the downfold, collectors of Mesozoic sediments may contain industrial oil and gas deposits as well. To that end, recently the major capacity of exploration drilling and geoexploration was focused within Yevlakh-Aghjabedy downfold, where Mesozoic structures are widespread alongside with Paleogen-Miocene sediments. Deep structural-tectonic framework and oil-gas bearing content both on south-west and north-east slopes of the downfold was specified via the results of conducted works. It was defined that by hydrocarbon saturation, north-west and south-east slopes sharply differ from each other both in the view of structural-tectonic and oil-gas bearing capacity, probably associated with various cycles of folding of Cenozoic and Mesozoic ages.


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 265-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Matson ◽  
Jack Magathan

The Hanna Basin is one of the world’s deeper intracratonic depressions. It contains exceptionally thick sequences of mature, hydrocarbon-rich Paleozoic through Eocene rocks and has the requisite structural and depositional history to be a significant petroleum province. The Tertiary Hanna and Ferris formations consist of up to 20,000 ft of organic-rich lacustrine shale, shaly mudstone, coal, and fluvial sandstone. The Upper Cretaceous Medicine Bow, Lewis, and Mesaverde formations consist of up to 10,000 ft of marine and nonmarine organic-rich shale enclosing multiple stacked beds of hydrocarbon-bearing sandstone. Significant shows of oil and gas in Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene rocks occur in the basin. Structural prospecting should be most fruitful around the edges where Laramide flank structures were created by out-of-the-basin thrust faults resulting from deformation of the basin’s unique 50-mile wide by 9-mile deep sediment package. Strata along the northern margin of the basin were compressed into conventional anticlinal folds by southward forces emanating from Emigrant Trail-Granite Mountains overthrusting. Oil and gas from Pennsylvanian to Upper Cretaceous aged rocks have been found in such structures near the Hanna Basin. Only seven wells have successfully probed the deeper part of the Hanna Basin (not including Anadarko’s #172 Durante lost hole, Sec. 17, T22N, R82W, lost in 2004, hopelessly stuck at 19,700 ft, unlogged and untested). Two of these wells tested gas at commercial rates from Upper Cretaceous rocks at depths of 10,000 to 12,000 ft. Sparse drilling along the Hanna Basin’s flanks has also revealed structures from 3,000 to 7,000 feet deep which yielded significant shows of oil and gas.


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