The Eagle Ford Shale: A Renaissance in U.S. Oil Production

Known as a world-class source rock for years, the Eagle Ford Shale became a world-class oil reservoir early in the second decade of the 21st century. Oil production from the Eagle Ford grew from 352 barrels of oil per day (BOPD) in 2007 to over 1.7 million BOPD in March 2015. Since then, the play has been a victim of its own success. Production from shale oil in the United States has helped contribute to a glut in world oil supply that led to a precipitous drop in oil prices beginning in the summer of 2014. As prices fell from over $100 per barrel in July 2014, to less than $30 per barrel in January 2016, production from the Eagle Ford declined over 500,000 BOPD. Anyone interested in the geology behind this remarkable play and the new ideas that reshaped the global energy supply should read AAPG Memoir 110.
Findings from the Eagle Ford Outcrops of West Texas and Implications to the Subsurface of South Texas
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Published:January 01, 2016
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CiteCitation
Arthur D. Donovan, T. Scott Staerker, Rand Gardner, Michael C. Pope, Aris Pramudito, Matthew Wehner, 2016. "Findings from the Eagle Ford Outcrops of West Texas and Implications to the Subsurface of South Texas", The Eagle Ford Shale: A Renaissance in U.S. Oil Production, John Breyer
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Abstract
The Eagle Ford Group crops out in a series of spectacular cut-bank exposures within Lozier Canyon region in Terrell County (west Texas). These outcrops provide an unparalleled opportunity to examine the Eagle Ford Group and gain valuable insights into explaining and predicting the vertical and lateral variability, as well as the thickness changes that can occur regionally within an unconventional source rock play.
In the subsurface of south Texas, the Eagle Ford Group is typically divided into an organic-rich Lower Eagle Formation and a carbonate-rich Upper Eagle Ford Formation. Both formations are petrophysically distinct, especially on gamma ray (GR) and sonic logs. When geochemically analyzed, the basal portion of the Upper Eagle Ford Formation also contains a unique positive carbon isotope δ13C excursion interpreted as the Ocean Anoxic Event 2 (OAE2). The peak of this isotope excursion is the assigned proxy for the base of the Turonian Stage. Within the Eagle Ford outcrops of west Texas a vertical succession of five informal lithostratigraphic units, referred to as units A to E from the base up, are fairly obvious. Unit A consists of interbedded grainstones and carbonate mudstones. Unit B is dominated by organic-rich black carbonate mudstones. Unit C consists of packstone beds interbedded with light gray carbonate mudstones. Unit D consists of bioturbated marls, while Unit E consists of grainstones interbedded with carbonate mudstones and bentonites. By incorporating petrophysical and geochemical data, the Lower and Upper Eagle Formations from the subsurface of south Texas can also be defined in the Eagle Ford outcrops of west Texas. Our work suggests that outcrop units A and B represent the Lower Eagle Ford Formation, while outcrop units C, D, and E represent the Upper Eagle Ford Formation. Similar to the subsurface of south Texas, a distinct positive carbon isotope δ13C excursion also occurs in the basal portions of the Upper Eagle Ford Formation (unit C) in outcrop. More detailed analysis of the outcrop and subsurface data from the Eagle Ford Group in west Texas indicates that the five informal lithostratigraphic units can be further divided into a vertical succession of 16 subunits. This more detailed vertical facies succession was used to define four genetically related depositional sequences each with distinctive geochemical and petrophysical characteristics which make them particularly suitable for regional subsurface mapping. For nomenclature simplicity, these four sequences are herein termed the lower and upper (allo-) members of the Lower Eagle Ford Formation and the lower and upper (allo-) members of the Upper Eagle Ford Formation. The lower member of the Lower Eagle Ford Formation is an organic-rich, high-resistivity, uranium-poor mudstone-dominated sequence. A distinctive clay-rich, low-resistivity zone also marks its base. This sequence appears to be the primary unconventional reservoir interval in the subsurface of south Texas. The upper member of the Lower Eagle Ford Formation can be characterized as a uranium- and bentonite-rich, mudstone-dominated sequence. The lower member of the Upper Eagle Ford Formation is a uranium-poor interbedded mudstone and limestone succession characterized by an overall (low) blocky GR pattern, the presence of a distinctive positive carbon isotope δ13C excursion, and a clay-rich, low-resistivity zone at its base. The upper member of the Upper Eagle Formation is a bentonite-bearing, low-TOC interval that is more bioturbated toward its base and interbedded toward its top. It is characterized by the presence of a high GR, low resistivity, and low velocity mudstone at its interpreted maximum flooding surface.
Regional correlations of the four defined Eagle Ford depositional sequences (allomembers) reveal that the unconformities at the base of each of the four sequences, as well as the one at the base of the overlying Austin Chalk, modify the thickness and distribution of underlying strata. Thus any attempt to explain and predict the distribution and thickness variations of any of the four sequences (allomembers), especially the organic-rich lower member of the Lower Eagle Ford Formation, is highly dependent on the recognition and regional mapping of these unconformities.
- allostratigraphy
- Austin Chalk
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- clastic rocks
- correlation
- Cretaceous
- Eagle Ford Formation
- Gulf Coastal Plain
- Gulfian
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- lithofacies
- lithostratigraphy
- mapping
- Mesozoic
- mudstone
- nomenclature
- North America
- oceanic anoxic events
- organic compounds
- outcrops
- petroleum
- reservoir rocks
- resistivity
- sedimentary rocks
- sequence stratigraphy
- source rocks
- spatial distribution
- stable isotopes
- Terrell County Texas
- Texas
- thickness
- total organic carbon
- Turonian
- unconformities
- United States
- Upper Cretaceous
- variations
- well logs
- West Texas
- southern Texas
- Lozier Canyon