Core Values: the Role of Core in Twenty-first Century Reservoir Characterization
CONTAINS OPEN ACCESS
Through state-of-the-art reviews and case studies this volume illustrates how innovative technologies, approaches and thinking continue to reinvent the value of both newly-acquired and legacy core for subsurface evaluation. Such an assessment is timely given that the sector sits at a pivotal point in terms of changing economics, demographics, skillsets and energy solutions.
U.S. Geological Survey Core Research Center: a gateway to subsurface discovery for geoscience research
-
Published:November 17, 2023
-
CiteCitation
Jeannine Honey, Dawn Ivis, 2023. "U.S. Geological Survey Core Research Center: a gateway to subsurface discovery for geoscience research", Core Values: the Role of Core in Twenty-first Century Reservoir Characterization, A. Neal, M. Ashton, L. S. Williams, S. J. Dee, T. J. H. Dodd, J. D. Marshall
Download citation file:
- Share
Abstract
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) operates the Core Research Center (CRC) in Denver, Colorado, USA, a public access repository of rock cores from over 9800 wells and drill cuttings from over 53 000 wells, primarily from states in or adjacent to the Rocky Mountain Region. Annually, approximately 1400 visitors use the collection for traditional and innovative research.
The CRC has an online, searchable database which includes downloadable core photos, analytical data, and thin-section images. When visitors sample for analyses, the results must be returned to the CRC for public dissemination providing immediate, free access to users while sparing the finite, irreplaceable collection from redundant testing. A representative quantity of every core depth is preserved in perpetuity.
Studies on CRC materials, paired with new extraction methods, have unlocked new productive deposits. Materials drilled and curated decades ago remain in high demand while materials receiving little attention today may be crucial for future research.
The collection provides immediate, inexpensive access to subsurface materials at a fraction of the cost of new drilling, sparing money, time and environmental impacts.