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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
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Southern Midcontinent region Available to Purchase
Abstract The Southern Midcontinent is a complex region characterized by great thicknesses of sediments preserved in a series of major depositional and structural basins separated by orogenic uplifts created mainly during Pennsylvanian time (Plate 5-A).Sedimentary rocks of every geologic system from Precambrian through the Quaternary are preserved within the region, and their diverse lithologies include limestones, dolomites, sandstones, shales, conglomerates, red beds, and evaporites. The strata are a mixture of marine and nonmarine deposits, and generally (except for the red bed-evaporite sequences), they are richly fossiliferous and are well suited to biostratigraphic correlation and interpretation of depositional environments. Dominant lithologies in most basins of the region are, in ascending order, as follows: a thin transgressive sandstone of Late Cambrian age that covered the basement-rock complex of intrusives, extrusives, and metasediments; overlain by a thick sequence of Late Cambrian through Late Mississippian (Meramecian) carbonates, with minor amounts of sandstone and shale; followed by a thick sequence of terrigenous clastics, with some carbonates, deposited from Late Mississippian (Chesterian) through Early Permian (Wolfcampian) time; then a thick series of red beds and evaporites were deposited during the remainder of the Permian; overlain, in the west only, by Triassic and Jurassic terrestrial red beds; then Cretaceous marine deposits in the south and west; and finally a mantle of Tertiary alluvial-fan, aeolian, and lacustrine sediments in the west. Owing to the great thickness of strata in most basins of the region, and the many surface and subsurface stratigraphie studies that have been conducted, a plethora of
Permo-Carboniferous Hydrocarbon Accumulations, Mid-Continent, U.S.A. Available to Purchase
Tectonic Origin of Preconsolidation Deformation in Upper Pennsylvanian Rocks Near Bartlesville, Oklahoma Available to Purchase
Abstract Significant reserves of oil and gas have been established in the western Kansas—western Nebraska region. The major oil and gas provinces of this region are the Central Kansas uplift and the Hugoton embayment, respectively. Of the known oil reserves, approximately 2.2 billion bbl had been produced to 1968. The Central Kansas uplift alone has produced about 2 billion bbl, and of this amount it is estimated that nearly 70 percent was obtained from the Arbuckle Group. In the Kansas part of the Hugoton embayment Wolfcampian rocks had produced 9.4 trillion cu ft of gas to 1968, which accounts for about 60 percent of the 15.5 trillion cu ft produced in the state. It does not appear, however, that Arbuckle and Wolfcampian rocks will be sources of significant new oil and gas reserves in the western Kansas—western Nebraska region. Both of these units have been explored and developed for more than 40 years, and their productive limits seem to be well defined. Outside the Hugoton embayment, Wolfcampian rocks have been penetrated by many wildcat and development wells which did not find production. Away from the Central Kansas uplift, Arbuckle rocks have been tested on several structures but results have not been encouraging.