Depositional Model and Development Significance of Clastic Reservoir

2014 ◽  
Vol 522-524 ◽  
pp. 1245-1248
Author(s):  
Wei Fu Liu ◽  
Shuang Long Liu ◽  
Hong Ying Han

A general geologic sedimentation model for reservoir is made by carefully analyzing the inberent essence of depositional environmentand for clastic rocks of lake basin. The basic model in the streaming environment is composed of two basic facies units: one is the waterway facie and the other is non-waterway facie. The principal characteristics of developing geology and sedimentology have been outlined. It can be commonly used in developing under-producted reserves and raising recovery ratio in the highly developed oil fields.

2019 ◽  
Vol 488 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-419
Author(s):  
A. A. Krasnobaev ◽  
V. N. Puchkov ◽  
N. D. Sergeeva ◽  
S. V. Busharina

New age determinations of detrital zircons of sandstones augmented the possibilities of interpretation of their provenance. This interpretation is often restricted by a formal comparison of age-and-composition characteristics of detrital crystals with any very distant model objects. A different situation arises when the role of a source of a detritus is claimed by local objects. The analysis of SHRIMP and TIMS - datеs of zircons and U and Th concentrations in them, and also a comparison of histograms of primary zircons from Riphean volcanics and rocks of the Taratash complex on one hand and the detrital zircons from the sandstones of Vendian (Asha series) and Lower Riphean (Ai Formation) on the other, have shown that the age variations of sources and clastics are comparable in many aspects. It means that the age characteristics of primary zircons from the Riphean volcanics and rocks of the Taratash complex as sources of zircon clastics for the Riphean and Vendian sandstones in the Southern Urals are regulated by processes of resedimentation, though the influence of distant sources is not excluded.


1956 ◽  
Vol S6-VI (4-5) ◽  
pp. 451-452
Author(s):  
Henri Termier ◽  
G. Termier

Abstract The formation of siliceous crusts, such as that of the Eyre lake basin in Australia, and other examples of silicification can probably be explained by the bio-rhexistasy theory. On the other hand, tropical vegetation and weathering do not seem to affect the sedimentary regime off the coast of Indonesia, as would be expected according to the theory. It is concluded that the theory is valid for stable areas, but that the nature and regime of sedimentation in unstable areas are largely a function of orogenic and probably also epeirogenic activity.


Zootaxa ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 1116 (1) ◽  
pp. 29 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANCISCO PROVENZANO ◽  
NADIA MILANI

A new species of suckermouth armored catfish, Cordylancistrus nephelion, is described from seven specimens collected in tributaries of the Tuy River in the Caribbean Sea basin of north-central Venezuela. Cordylancistrus nephelion can be distinguished from the other species assigned to its genus by its unique color pattern, the head and body being marked with irregular white spots. Cordylancistrus nephelion is the third species of the genus described from Venezuela: Cordylancistrus torbesensis (Schultz 1944) from the Mérida mountain range (Cordillera de Mérida), Orinoco River basin; C. perijae Pérez and Provenzano 1996 from Perijá mountain range (Sierra de Perijá), Maracaibo Lake basin; and now C. nephelion from the La Costa mountain range (Cordillera de La Costa). These three species inhabit isolated foothill rivers and have very restricted geographic distributions. The extreme alteration of the Tuy River basin by humans may threaten Cordylancistrus nephelion and the other fish species endemic to the basin with extinction. An artificial key for the species assigned to the genus Cordylancistrus is presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (16) ◽  
pp. 5429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ran Liu ◽  
Bisheng Du ◽  
Wenwen Yuan ◽  
Guiping Li

Increasing attention to sustainable development issues and recycling are forcing the recyclers to use different incentives to capture more market share. Recycling innovation input is one of the effective topics in reverse competitive chains. Because of the importance of this issue, firstly, a basic closed-loop supply chain (CLSC) system is discussed that includes an integrated manufacturer and a third-party collector. Then the impact of the integration with the innovation input into third-party product collectors is considered. Eventually, two models are constructed. The first model is a basic model that includes an integrated manufacturer and one third-party collector with innovation investment. The other model is the hybrid model that includes an integrated manufacturer and two third-party collectors with and without innovation input. Stackelberg game models are used to study the optimal pricing strategies for all three models and players’ attitudes toward different scenarios. Finally, numerical analysis is presented. Our findings are generated on the following three aspects. The collector’s recycling choice, recycling innovation input, and influence on recyclers and manufacturers. It is found that the manufacturer will always choose to recycle and prefers the hybrid recycling market, which depends on the rate of collection and the compensation from production-collecting. Moreover, the results reveal that the highest return rate of recyclers occurred under the hybrid model. However, the recyclers may not be able to invest the sustainable recycle innovation input under the exorbitant innovation barriers.


1922 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 287-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Gratia

1. When the few individuals still alive in a dissolved culture of Bacillus coli are transplanted on slanted agar, a culture results which possesses new characteristics. First observed by Bordet and Ciuca, this culture received the temporary name of modified coli. In the study described above, we found that this modified coli is very heterogeneous and that its three principal characteristics, resistance to lysis, lysogenic properties, and mucoid growth, are shared among different types of organisms that can be isolated when the normal original coli (coli O) is plated together with increasing quantities of the lytic agent: (a) a certain number of bacilli are just resistant enough to survive and grow in the presence of a moderate quantity of lytic agent, but they are still more or less sensitive and produce diseased, irregular, and lysogenic colonies; (b) a few of the organisms are able to resist concentrated lytic agent; they are entirely resistant and give round, healthy, and non-lysogenic colonies (coli O R 2); and (c) among these resistant bacilli only a very few are mucoid (coli 0 R 1). All these types are not motile and not fluorescent. 2. The original coli, when allowed to age, can be dissociated, as we have shown in a preceding paper (1), into two types of organisms, the non-motile coli S and the very motile coli R. Submitted to lysis, coli S gives a very small number, coli R a much greater number of resistant organisms (coli S R and coli R R), but both types never yield any mucoid growth. 3. An old culture of the modified coli obtained by Bordefand Ciuca, when streaked on agar plate, gives two types of colonies: a mucoid and fluorescent type (coli M 1) and a non-mucoid and translucent type (coli M 2). Both types are motile. Coli M 2, once isolated, keeps its individuality even after several passages in artificial media, but if again submitted to the lytic agent, a great number of mucoid bacilli are found among the organisms which are still alive. Consequently, different types of Bacillus coli differ greatly in their ability to give a mucoid growth when submitted to the lytic agent. Some, like coli S and coli R, do not possess this property at all. Others, like coli O, possess it to a certain extent, and some, like coli M 2, have it to a very high degree. 4. The mucoid and motile Bacillus coli M 1, when streaked every day on agar plates, remains indefinitely mucoid and motile, but occasionally a mucoid colony shows an indentation made up of non-mucoid growth, which, transplanted, gives a pure culture of non-mucoid and non-motile organisms, coli M 1 a. This new type possesses all the characteristics of the original strain of Bacillus coli, and therefore must be considered as a reversion. 5. The mucoid and motile Bacillus coli M 1, kept growing in synthetic medium, remains perfectly stable; on the other hand, when it is transplanted in broth, Bacillus coli M 1 turns very quickly into a non-mucoid but still very motile organism, or Bacillus coli M 1 b. This last type, which produces translucent colonies on agar and grows granular in broth, never reverts to the mucoid form, even in the presence of lytic agent. 6. A single strain of Bacillus coli has thus been made to yield eleven different forms, all distinguished by striking characteristics, but still possessing the specific properties of Bacillus coli. Nine of these forms have been submitted to antisera prepared with three different types (Bacillus coli O, Bacillus coli S, and Bacillus coli R). While seven out of these nine strains were agglutinated by any of the three antisera, only the original Bacillus coli (Bacillus coli O) and the reversion to the original type (Bacillus coli M 1 a) were not agglutinable, even by their corresponding antiserum; i.e., the serum obtained from a rabbit immunized with Bacillus coli O, which, however, agglutinated the other types.


2012 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 480-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masaki Miyake ◽  
◽  
Koichi Suzumori ◽  
Kazuo Uzuka ◽  

The purpose of this work is to develop a thin, electromagnetic wobble motor with a large amount of torque, a motor thinner than conventional ones and able to be applied to portable electric equipment. We have developed a basic model of the motor 30 mm in diameter and 5 mm in thickness. In this paper, the basic structure and control method are first presented. Next, the design of the electromagnets and the three types of gear pairs, which have different pressure angles for the reduction mechanism, are presented. Finally, the motor drive experiments are performed using two types of drive: one is a two-phase drive, and the other is a four-phase drive. Three types of gear pairs are also shown. The motor works successfully, and its great potential to be mounted in thin, portable equipments is confirmed.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1322-1335
Author(s):  
Zain Alabdeen A. Al-Shawi ◽  
Maher M. Mahdi ◽  
Abbas H. Mohammed

Shuaiba Formation is an important formation in Iraq, because of their deposition in the important period during the geological history of Arabian plate. The study is focused on a number of selected wells from several fields in southern Iraq, despite the many of oil studies to Shuaiba Formation but it lacks to paleontological studies. Four selected wells are chosen for the current study, Zb-290, Ru-358, R-624, WQ1-353, the selected wells are located within different fields, these are Zubair, Rumaila and West Qurna Oil Fields. In this study fourteen species followed to genus Hedbergella were discovered for first time as well as three genera followed to genus Heterohelix in the Shuaiba Formation at the different oil fields, Hedbergella tunisiensis Range Zone is suggested biozone to the current study, the age of this biozone is Aptian, most of the other genera located within this zone.


2020 ◽  
pp. 2998-3005
Author(s):  
Nowfal A. Nassir ◽  
Ahmed S. Al-Banna ◽  
Ghazi H. Al-Sharaa

The detailed data of the Vp/Vs ratio and porosity logs were used to detect the Oil-Water Contact Zone (OWCZ) of Nahr Umr sandstone and Mishrif limestone reservoir formations in Kumiat (Kt) and Dujaila (Du) oil fields, southeastern Iraq. The results of OWC were confirmed using P-wave, Resistivity, and Water Saturation (Sw) logs of Kt-1 and Du-1 wells. It was found that the values of the oil-water contact zone thickness in Nahr Umr sandstone and Mishrif limestone were approximately one meter and eight meters, respectively. These results suggest that the OWCZ is possibly thicker in the carbonate rock than clastic rock formations. The thickness of OWCZ in the clastic rocks changed from one part to another, depending on several factors including mineral composition, grain size, porosity, pore shape, and fluid type.


The approach adopted here appears to be reasonable at first glance. However, quite apart from the specific difficulties it causes in relation to contracts made via standard forms, there are, on closer examination, some difficulties with the basic approach. It appears to envisage that all contractual negotiations are ‘cut and dried’, so that each party in turn stakes out their position and (normally) wholly rejects the position of the other (if they do not unconditionally accept it). The reality of most negotiations is, of course, very different – an offeree may wish to accept the basic proposal of another whilst introducing modifications, say, as to time of delivery, or payment by instalments. The rigidity of the basic model adopted by English law does not readily allow for this, in that any significant modification contained in a proposed acceptance will be seen as a counter-offer (to be valid, an acceptance must be unconditional) and as a rejection of the original offer. The law does not seem to provide for ‘in principle’ acceptances or commitments. One slight qualification to the above is that a mere enquiry will not be viewed as a counter-offer – an offeree can request information about the offer without rejecting it (although without some subsequent unconditional acceptance, there will equally be no contract and the offer may eventually lapse or be revoked). The point is demonstrated well in the case of Stevenson, Jacques and Co v McLean. The defendant, being possessed of warrants for iron, wrote from London to the plaintiff at Middlesborough, asking whether they could get him an offer for the warrants. Further correspondence ensued and, ultimately, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff fixing 40 s per ton net cash as the lowest price at which he could sell, stating that he would hold the offer open till the following Monday. The plaintiff, on Monday morning at 9.42 am, telegraphed to the defendant: ‘Please wire whether you would accept 40 for delivery over two months or, if not, longest limit you could give.’ The defendant sent no answer to this telegram and, after its receipt on the same day, he sold the warrants and, at 1.25 pm, telegraphed to plaintiff that he had done so. Before the arrival of his telegram to that effect, the plaintiff, having at 1 pm found a purchaser for the iron, sent a telegram at 1.34 pm to the defendant, stating that they had secured his price. The defendant refused to deliver the iron and the plaintiff brought an action against him for non-delivery. Lush J, at first instance, found that a binding contract had come into being at 1.34 pm: Stevenson, Jacques and Co v McLean (1880) 5 QB 346, p 349

1995 ◽  
pp. 99-100

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