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GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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Primary terms
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Facies models for rocky shorelines and their application to transgressed basement highs in the North Sea
The influence of salt tectonics on the distribution of the Triassic Skagerrak Formation in the Ula Field, Norwegian North Sea
Predicting oil field performance using machine learning programming: a comparative case study from the UK continental shelf
Transport of mafic magma through the crust and sedimentary basins: Jameson Land, East Greenland
ABSTRACT The Uinta Basin of eastern Utah is an intermontane basin that contains an ~2-km-thick succession of mostly carbonate-rich mudrock assigned to the Eocene Green River Formation. In the southwest part of the basin, along Nine Mile Canyon and its tributary canyons, the middle member of the Green River Formation contains numerous interbedded sand bodies. Previous researchers have interpreted these sand bodies variably as lacustrine deltaic mouth bars, terminal fluvial distributary bars, and various types of fluvial (delta plain/floodplain/braid plain) bar. Using some modern western U.S. lakes as partial analogues, and taking into account the overall lacustrine basin context of a widely fluctuating, wave-influenced, alkaline-lake shoreline, we again interpret many of the sand bodies to be fluvial in origin. Several sand bodies both truncate and are capped by brown to red-maroon and variegated weak to noncalcareous mudstone with root and desiccation structures, indicating terrestrial deposition well away from the lake shoreline. Others display steep cutbanks from which noncalcareous, inclined heterolithic stratification laterally accreted as fluvial side bars. Utilizing helicopter-based light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data, we investigated additional sand bodies that may be better examples of deltaic mouth bars. In contrast to the more commonly documented highstand progradational mouth bars of marine and open lake settings, these sand bodies are interpreted to have originated as late-lowstand or transgressive system tract fluvial channels that were then flooded and modified by waves following lake transgression. These examples illustrate that any large-scale sandy bed form present in the general vicinity of a closed basin’s fluctuating lake shore may be expected to have formed under more than one set of environmental conditions. A revised set of guidelines is therefore presented to aid in the interpretation of lacustrine deltaic mouth bars.
Geology and petroleum prospectivity of the Sea of Hebrides Basin and Minch Basin, offshore NW Scotland
Combining process-based models and multiple-point geostatistics for improved reservoir modelling
Stratigraphic controls on hydrocarbon recovery in clastic reservoirs of the Norwegian Continental Shelf
UK Rockall prospectivity: re-awakening exploration in a frontier basin
Machine-learning algorithm for estimating oil-recovery factor using a combination of engineering and stratigraphic dependent parameters
LATITUDINAL CONTROLS ON MODERN SHORELINE GEOMETRIES
Abstract The UK Rockall Basin is one of the most underexplored areas of the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS), with only 12 exploration wells drilled since 1980. With only one discovery made in 2000 (Benbecula (154/1-1) gas discovery), the general view of the basin from an exploration viewpoint is not positive. However, over the last 15 years, our knowledge of the petroleum systems of the Atlantic Margin has substantially increased. With the recent acquisition of new seismic data by the UK Government as part of the OGA's Frontiers Basin Research Programme, it is a pertinent time to re-examine the prospectivity of the UK Rockall Basin. This paper presents a history of exploration within the UK Rockall Basin, from the first well drilled in the basin in 1980, to the last well, drilled in 2006. We then present new insights into the lack of success during exploration within the basin, in particular by focusing on the extensive Early Cenozoic volcanic rocks within Rockall, to illustrate the wide range of potential interactions with the petroleum system. We also present evidence that points to the potential of a viable intra-basaltic (Rosebank) type play along the eastern flank of the Rockall Basin.
Mafic intrusions, hydrothermal venting, and the basalt-sediment transition: Linking onshore and offshore examples from the North Atlantic igneous province
Recognition and importance of amalgamated sandy meander belts in the continental rock record
Distribution of discontinuous mudstone beds within wave-dominated shallow-marine deposits: Star Point Sandstone and Blackhawk Formation, Eastern Utah
Abstract Current recovery from the Statfjord Group in the majority of the fields on the Tampen Spur is less than 50%. A contributing factor to this is an incomplete understanding of multiscale heterogeneities, their distributions within a range of fluvial geobodies and their lateral extent and morphology in inter-well areas. Sedimentary heterogeneities have been modelled, together with petrophysical parameters, at a variety of scales. The modelled properties at a given scale were upscaled to the next level of heterogeneity, thus better honouring effective property values. The use of outcrop analogues is still a key tool for understanding facies relationships and the stratigraphic development of subsurface hydrocarbon-bearing reservoirs. The Lourinhã Formation, Portugal, was used as an analogue to collect both qualitative and quantitative data consistently following a three-phase workflow to capture data at various scales of heterogeneity. Traditional field data collection techniques have been supplemented with the collection of LiDAR data. A digital workflow utilizing interlinked datasets facilitates rapid data analysis and better data visualization with results that are more easily utilized in multiscale modelling studies. These scaled models were used to increase our understanding of the effect on flow of lithofacies and facies association distributions together with internal architectural elements and heterogeneities.
Abstract The aerial extent, thickness and internal distribution of grain-size are key, bed-scale controls on turbidite reservoir performance. Process-based modelling provides a method for predicting both the sandbody thickness and the grain-size distribution within the bed. The goal of the current study is to test such an approach on the Annot Sandstone in the Peïra Cava Sub-basin in SE France, and determine whether the process-based model can reliably recreate the bed characteristics observed in the outcrop. Turbidity currents were modelled using a commercially available software solution called MassFlow3D that is based on computational fluid dynamics. The goal of the current study was to accurately replicate a single bed (termed MU5). To achieve this goal, the base of the basin was structurally restored and then a simplified simulation of the beds below MU5 was generated using four flow events in order to recreate the bathymetry on to which MU5 was simulated. Several versions of MU5 were simulated with different input parameters for the flow, and the results were compared with the observed thickness and grain-size distribution from the outcrop. The study suggests that process-based modelling has the potential to be a useful tool in reservoir modelling. Supplementary material: Multi-phase flow modelling of transport, deposition and erosion of sediments is available at http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18719 .
Abstract Deltaic reservoirs typically contain seaward-dipping surfaces termed clinoforms. Shale and carbonate cements covering clinoforms can frequently form a barrier or baffle to horizontal flow within reservoirs, However, clinoforms are not typically included in static or flow simulation models because they are often not identified in well data and little is known about their 3D geometry. High quality outcrops such as Cretaceous deposits of the US Western Interior Seaway provide an ideal opportunity to study clinoform geometry and shape, and to model their effects on flow. Within this study, two deltaic systems have been studied. The first is the Ferron Delta which crops out in the Wasatch Plateau, central Utah and is a highstand complex comprised of a number of small, overlapping lobes. Clinoforms are common and their 3D geometry is controlled by the position of the lobes. Large growth fault structures within the lobes add to the potential reservoir complexity. The forced regressive Panther Tongue Delta crops out in the Book Cliffs of Utah and is comprised of downstepping lobes with internal clinoforms. Data for modelling included traditional sedimentary logs, photomontages and calibrated photo logs. Models were built in IRAP RMS using a variety of modelling techniques from simple Truncated Gaussian Simulations on a regular grid to object modelling of shale barriers within a dipping grid designed to follow the clinoforms. The models were flow simulated as a means of comparing the different techniques for representing the heterogeneity results show that not modelling clinoforms explicitly in a dipping grid can lead to significant overestimates in the forecasted production; water injection in a down depositional dip position is optimum, and that there are only limited production differences between highstand and lowstand deltas.