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Issues
Volume 103, Number 6
June 2019

ISSN 0149-1423
EISSN 1558-9153
In this Issue
ARTICLES
Origin of conventional and shale gas in Sinian–lower Paleozoic strata in the Sichuan Basin: Relayed gas generation from liquid hydrocarbon cracking
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1265-1296. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/11151817334
Fractal characteristics of the anisotropic microstructure and pore distribution of low-rank coal
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1297-1319. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/11151817226
Late Mesozoic sediment provenance on Georges Bank: Enlargement of river drainages to the Atlantic Ocean in the Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1321-1350. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/10261817348
Temperature and pressure characteristics of Ordovician gas condensate reservoirs in the Tazhong area, Tarim Basin, northwestern China
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1351-1381. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/1115181617017043
A new approach for characterization and prediction of natural fracture occurrence in tight oil sandstones with intense anisotropy
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1383-1400. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/12131818054
Integrating strike-slip tectonism with three-dimensional basin and petroleum system analysis of the Salinas Basin, California
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1443-1472. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/11151817276
An efficient, consistent, and trackable method to quantify organic matter–hosted porosity from ion-milled scanning electron microscope images of mudrock gas reservoirs
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1473-1492. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/12131817231
Resource potential and core area prediction of lacustrine tight oil: The Triassic Yanchang Formation in Ordos Basin, China
AAPG Bulletin June 15, 2019, Vol.103, 1493-1523. doi:https://doi.org/10.1306/11211816511
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Cover Image
Cover Image
ON COVER – Final stages of progradation of the Cariatiz Messinian reefs in the Sorbas Basin (Almeria, southeastern Spain). Some of the megaporosity observed in this panoramic view is interpreted as flank margin caves related to freshwater diagenesis (i.e., coastal karst processes). Hydrocarbon pore volume in karst can be significant in carbonate reservoirs. The paper by Fernandez-Ibanez et al. (AAPG Bulletin, v.103, no.5, p. 1111–1131) presents a workflow for characterizing and modeling karst in the subsurface. Photo provided by Fermin Fernandez-Ibanez.
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