scholarly journals Ordovician Fauna in a Small Fault Block on the Yarrol Fault, South of Calliope, Central Queensland

2021 ◽  
Vol 129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter A. Jell ◽  
Ian G. Percival ◽  
Alex G. Cook
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 689-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wu Yahong ◽  
Weng Xingfang ◽  
Xu Mengya ◽  
Guo Shengtao

2013 ◽  
Vol 295-298 ◽  
pp. 3205-3208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Fei Shen ◽  
Ling Li ◽  
Yong Sheng Chen ◽  
Nian Qiao Fang ◽  
Jian Li ◽  
...  

The quantity and availability of water injection are affected by geological environments in complex small fault-block oilfields, especially nearby faults. It is a general method to qualitatively determine fault sealing ability by water injection availability. The availability analysis of several injection wells can judge sealing ability of five faults of block M28-1 in JD oilfield. The water injection data show that fault F1, F4, F5 are main areas of pressure releasing for unsealing. Fault F2 and F3 are distributed on each side of the water injection well, which have a little influence on loss of water injection for sealing.


2012 ◽  
Vol 170-173 ◽  
pp. 1348-1352
Author(s):  
Fan Shun Kong

In view of the broken fault, rapid sediment, high heterogeneity,high structural dip and rapid reservoir change in Block Bei301, fine reservoir description research was implemented including small fault identification, fan delta sedimentary microfacies subdivision and facies-constrained modeling, and the problems existing in production were analyzed zone by zone and interval by interval. Moreover, other unique adjustment strategies were implemented including reservoir engineering and numerical simulation researches, well pattern thickening, injection-production system adjustment, separated layer system adjustment, as well as horizontal well technology. Finally, oilfield development effect was improved and a series of unique adjustment technologies for complex fault block reservoir were preliminarily formed, which provides reference for the development adjustment in similar oilfields


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-114
Author(s):  
Jesús Pinto ◽  
John Warme

We interpret a discrete, anomalous ~10-m-thick interval of the shallow-marine Middle to Late Devonian Valentine Member of the Sultan Formation at Frenchman Mountain, southern Nevada, to be a seismite, and that it was generated by the Alamo Impact Event. A suite of deformation structures characterize this unique interval of peritidal carbonate facies at the top of the Valentine Member; no other similar intervals have been discovered in the carbonate beds on Frenchman Mountain or in equivalent Devonian beds exposed in ranges of southern Nevada. The disrupted band extends for 5 km along the Mountain, and onto the adjoining Sunrise Mountain fault block for an additional 4+km. The interval displays a range of brittle, ductile and fluidized structures, and is divided into four informal bed-parallel units based on discrete deformation style and internal features that carry laterally across the study area. Their development is interpreted as the result of intrastratal compressional and contractional forces imposed upon the unconsolidated to fully cemented near-surface carbonate sediments at the top of the Valentine Member. The result is an assemblage of fractured, faulted, and brecciated beds, some of which were dilated, fluidized and injected to form new and complex matrix bands between beds. We interpret that the interval is an unusually thick and well displayed seismite. Because the Sultan Formation correlates northward to the Frasnian (lower Upper Devonian) carbonate rocks of the Guilmette Formation, and the Guilmette contains much thicker and more proximal exposures of the Alamo Impact Breccia, including seismites, we interpret the Frenchman Mountain seismite to be a far-field product of the Alamo Impact Event. Accompanying ground motion and deformation of the inner reaches of the Devonian carbonate platform may have resulted in a fall of relative sea level and abrupt shift to a salt-pan paleoenvironment exhibited by the post-event basal beds of the directly overlying Crystal Pass Member.


2021 ◽  
pp. 104831
Author(s):  
Hilary Corlett ◽  
David Hodgetts ◽  
Jesal Hirani ◽  
Atle Rotevatn ◽  
Rochelle Taylor ◽  
...  
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