27 research outputs found

    Subsurface lithofacies mapping from geophysical logs in Kansas

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    Stratigraphic tops picked from geophysical logs are basic data in the preparation of regional subsurface maps of structure and thickness. These maps are topological-they are restricted to the display of the shape and size of stratigraphic units. However, the quantitative variation of logs with depth can be analyzed in terms of mineralogy and porosity which express the internal composition of these units. Use of computer-mapping packages in a novel way allows this information to be interpolated from available well control in the generation of lithofacies maps. As a practical example, the composition of the Viola Limestone was mapped in a four-county area in southern Kansas through transformation of data from neutron, density, and sonic logs into estimations of calcite, dolomite, chert, and pore volume. Available cuttings and core information were used both to monitor the result and to provide detailed meaning to observed variation. The map shows facies patterns which are readily related to depositional, diagenetic, and erosional trends. In a second example, the statistical moments of the gamma-ray log were used by a computer program to generate three-dimensional trend maps and cross section slices of shale-sand variation in the Simpson Group of the same area. The results give an immediate picture of the shapes and dispositions of major sandstone and sandy carbonate bodies, as well as outlining the areal pattern of a basal transgressive sand

    Lithofacies and geochemical facies profiles from nuclear wire-line logs: New subsurface templates for sedimentary modeling

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    The use of wire-line logs in subsurface studies is all too often restricted to the correlation of selected stratigraphic horizons. There is an increasing content of valuable geologic information in modern wire-line logs that can be extracted by simple computer processing. The resulting log transformations provide lengthy and continuous records of sections of interest. Examples of these methods, as applied to Cretaceous and Permian stratigraphic case studies, are described here. The log data can be incorporated in either forward- or reverse-modeling modes in the simulation and analysis of sedimentary sequences. In addition to their geologic information content, wire-line logs are quantitative, and so their data can be entered easily into numerical modeling programs. Analysis can be made in either the stratigraphic time or frequency domain. The power spectra of logs give key insights into the nature and scale of sedimentary depositional mechanisms

    Subsurface lithofacies mapping from geophysical logs in Kansas

    Get PDF
    Stratigraphic tops picked from geophysical logs are basic data in the preparation of regional subsurface maps of structure and thickness. These maps are topological-they are restricted to the display of the shape and size of stratigraphic units. However, the quantitative variation of logs with depth can be analyzed in terms of mineralogy and porosity which express the internal composition of these units. Use of computer-mapping packages in a novel way allows this information to be interpolated from available well control in the generation of lithofacies maps. As a practical example, the composition of the Viola Limestone was mapped in a four-county area in southern Kansas through transformation of data from neutron, density, and sonic logs into estimations of calcite, dolomite, chert, and pore volume. Available cuttings and core information were used both to monitor the result and to provide detailed meaning to observed variation. The map shows facies patterns which are readily related to depositional, diagenetic, and erosional trends. In a second example, the statistical moments of the gamma-ray log were used by a computer program to generate three-dimensional trend maps and cross section slices of shale-sand variation in the Simpson Group of the same area. The results give an immediate picture of the shapes and dispositions of major sandstone and sandy carbonate bodies, as well as outlining the areal pattern of a basal transgressive sand

    Mathematical studies of coal measures sedimentation in Ayrshire, Scotland

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    Lithofacies and geochemical facies profiles from nuclear wire-line logs: New subsurface templates for sedimentary modeling

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    The use of wire-line logs in subsurface studies is all too often restricted to the correlation of selected stratigraphic horizons. There is an increasing content of valuable geologic information in modern wire-line logs that can be extracted by simple computer processing. The resulting log transformations provide lengthy and continuous records of sections of interest. Examples of these methods, as applied to Cretaceous and Permian stratigraphic case studies, are described here. The log data can be incorporated in either forward- or reverse-modeling modes in the simulation and analysis of sedimentary sequences. In addition to their geologic information content, wire-line logs are quantitative, and so their data can be entered easily into numerical modeling programs. Analysis can be made in either the stratigraphic time or frequency domain. The power spectra of logs give key insights into the nature and scale of sedimentary depositional mechanisms

    Latent Facies Mapping from Binary Geological Data

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    This is the published version. Copyright University of Chicago PressMany geological observation sets contain discrete-state data, which can be encoded as binary patterns. When there are conditional relationships between the variables, latent class analysis may be applied to subdivide the total sample into latent facies associations, which have local independence in the probability sense. Probabilities of latent facies assignments can be mapped areally as continuous surfaces of implied geological facies. Latent class analysis is rooted in simple probabilityt heory and can be a useful technique in geological applications where observations are descriptive or weakly numerical. The method is illustrated by a latent facies mapping of the Morrison Formation (Upper Jurassic) in the subsurface of west Kansas

    Field Demonstration of Carbon Dioxide Miscible Flooding in the Lansing-Kansas City Formation, Central Kansas

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    A pilot carbon dioxide miscible flood was initiated in the Lansing Kansas City C formation in the Hall Gurney Field, Russell County, Kansas. The reservoir zone is an oomoldic carbonate located at a depth of about 2900 feet. The pilot consists of one carbon dioxide injection well and three production wells. Continuous carbon dioxide injection began on December 2, 2003. By the end of June 2005, 16.19 MM lb of carbon dioxide was injected into the pilot area. Injection was converted to water on June 21, 2005 to reduce operating costs to a breakeven level with the expectation that sufficient carbon dioxide was injected to displace the oil bank to the production wells by water injection. By March 7,2010, 8,736 bbl of oil were produced from the pilot. Production from wells to the northwest of the pilot region indicates that oil displaced from carbon dioxide injection was produced from Colliver A7, Colliver A3, Colliver A14 and Graham A4 located on adjacent leases. About 19,166 bbl of incremental oil were estimated to have been produced from these wells as of March 7, 2010. There is evidence of a directional permeability trend toward the NW through the pilot region. The majority of the injected carbon dioxide remains in the pilot region, which has been maintained at a pressure at or above the minimum miscibility pressure. Estimated oil recovery attributed to the CO2 flood is 27,902 bbl which is equivalent to a gross CO2 utilization of 4.8 MCF/bbl. The pilot project is not economic
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