00:00 | back up, come in. that's true. Or So let me |
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00:15 | in here. Let me get her here that we can talk about the |
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00:20 | from last week. Yeah, finish our lectures and then at the end |
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00:25 | the time I think will be way of schedule. Angela, can you |
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00:41 | me? Yes, I can hear okay. Yeah. All right. |
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00:49 | we have everybody here so we'll go and get started and let me start |
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00:58 | recording here. Um This is the for you for any of you who |
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01:05 | to ask any questions about the exam last week and then uh you all |
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01:13 | the guidelines for the final. I hope you did. So we |
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01:18 | talk more about that at the end this. I know Angela, you |
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01:21 | be here but it should be on recording. So, any any conversation |
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01:26 | the final terms of guidelines? Say it again. Yeah. |
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01:42 | Anyhow? Yeah, I do. 12. Mhm. Yeah. |
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02:05 | Number number 12 was named two of four conditions required to accumulate a thick |
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02:12 | will subtitle evaporate deposit. So the thing you need obviously is a |
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02:19 | right? You need some sort of . That's what we call an isolated |
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02:24 | basin, right? It has to at least periodically restricted because you have |
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02:29 | allow water to come in. Remember talked about taking one poor volume of |
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02:34 | , whether it's, you know, little cubic millimeter, whether it's a |
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02:41 | a bunch of water in the basin you evaporate that out. You can |
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02:45 | precipitate so much. All right. you have to have recharge. So |
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02:49 | the second thing, periodic recharging the waters because that's where all the evaporates |
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02:54 | coming from sea water. Okay. then you need a relatively dry climate |
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03:01 | order to facilitate precipitation. And then need a sill. Remember a little |
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03:09 | on the edge of the basin in to a lot water in and |
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03:12 | but also to block it periodically. right. So that's where there may |
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03:18 | an interplay between sea level and and that's still topography. Right? |
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03:23 | when you drop sea level, that's to restrict it to a little |
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03:27 | right? You're not going to but when you raise the level, |
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03:29 | may recharge. So some people think a tie back between the recharge |
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03:35 | and sea level. Okay. Sets the a and then and then be |
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03:48 | got that. Okay, So when talk about interaction, I'm talking about |
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03:54 | it influences, uh, uh, deposits either from a place standpoint or |
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04:01 | a reservoir quality standpoint or um, I said, it can create topography |
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04:10 | localize reefs or grain stones. It conservatives a ceiling face for carbonate |
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04:15 | We talked about the pinnacle reefs that on the michigan basin encased in |
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04:22 | So that provides the entrapment for the , of course any nearby that predict |
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04:29 | can be a potential source for magnesium delay metis and then the last point |
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04:36 | I put on there, which is least common is there is potential for |
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04:40 | to be a source rock because sometimes can accumulate organic material because there's nothing |
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04:47 | eat it, right? So santa can live in evaporated setting and there's |
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04:53 | to eat it. So you could some and mature it. And I |
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05:01 | I know in the permian that some chase that kind of play for a |
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05:06 | , but they just didn't get the of hydrocarbon out of it. So |
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05:09 | potential there and then most of you the stability thing. So, you |
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05:18 | the difference between an hydrate and gypsum the bound water, right? Gypsum |
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05:23 | bound water and and and hydrate doesn't so when you to go into the |
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05:32 | , you have to bury the So what's going to happen to gypsum |
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05:36 | burial, you're going to you're going kick the water out of the crystal |
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05:40 | . You're going to the water gypsum you're going to convert it to an |
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05:44 | . Okay, so, so that's it's more stable in the subsurface and |
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05:50 | think I showed a diagram in our where once you get about 2000 ft |
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05:56 | burial, that's when the gypsum seems start going to and hydrate. |
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06:07 | Any other questions? Yeah, Sand body geometries. Yeah, everybody |
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06:29 | with that, uh which must mean not doing a very good job of |
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06:34 | what's going on. But uh, at least you tried and I give |
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06:43 | credit for that. Yeah. let's see which question the question was |
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06:54 | great? Yeah. Okay, so on Cocos platform. I said, |
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07:02 | kind of geometries? Right. So is lengthened within and depth, |
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07:08 | Or thickness. So that's what we by geometry. So I went through |
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07:15 | different types that we encountered and I first with the two subtitle sand |
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07:21 | they lined up parallel to the trade , right? They started behind |
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07:27 | That was a tom below effect that that initial agitation. Once you start |
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07:32 | sand body, then it just builds itself. Okay, so the key |
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07:36 | to get us started and once you started, then it's going to |
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07:40 | It's gonna build up and then it's to be pushed progressively down wind by |
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07:46 | trade winds and by occasional hurricanes because move east or west as well |
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07:52 | Okay, so linear subtitle sand bodies to the wind and I showed you |
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08:01 | major ones on keiko's platform. And what happened when we had older island |
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08:06 | ? Remember my hand represents the Pleistocene and the trade winds are blowing into |
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08:12 | island. Well, what are they to do along the shoreline? They're |
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08:15 | to agitate the shoreline and so you shoreline fluids that then feed a Beatrice |
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08:24 | . And then to do that, have to have storms involved right in |
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08:28 | to push the sand up above sea to make a beach ridge. But |
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08:33 | net effect of that production is to a sand body. Now that is |
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08:39 | but shoreline parallel. Okay, But what is it what is it going |
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08:44 | do through time? I showed you in less than 3500 years. It |
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08:49 | graded about a 0.5 km into the . Right? So not only is |
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08:54 | shoreline parallel to that old topography, it can take on the pro gradation |
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09:00 | geometry as it builds out into the . Okay. Such pressure. |
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09:07 | So the whole sand body is perpendicular the trade winds, but it's parallel |
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09:13 | the shore line because that's the backstop you agitate against. And then the |
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09:19 | body just starts pro grading into the . All right. So, I |
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09:23 | guess, you know if if sea stayed relatively pretty much the way it |
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09:28 | . Now You give the Keiko sands 50,000 years. I bet they would |
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09:32 | grade across most of that platform. right from from west to east. |
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09:39 | . And then the third type were sheet like deposits that occurred in the |
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09:44 | part and deeper part of the That was in 2015, 2025 ft |
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09:50 | water. Ah They're not as agitated much only by the stronger trade |
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09:57 | So, you know, the 15 20 mile an hour wind would certainly |
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10:02 | a beach and would agitate a shallow subtitle sand body. But it probably |
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10:09 | agitate in 20 ft of water. when you jack it up to 25 |
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10:13 | 30 or 40 mph, which is the winds blow in the summer then |
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10:18 | gets agitated. And that's when we the U. S. Are being |
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10:20 | . All right. And so we up with these widespread sheet like |
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10:24 | So it's a sheet like geometry. ? We talked about sheet like geometry |
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10:29 | ? But it's not due to pro , it's just due to the fact |
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10:32 | you've got a broad area of the interior that can be agitated frequently enough |
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10:38 | year to strip out the mud and make who? It's all right |
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10:43 | not the greatest looking new. It's think I showed you a picture, |
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10:46 | uh the point is it's going to preserved as a grain stone. |
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10:52 | And then the fourth type were remember the leeward margin, the western and |
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10:57 | margin of tacos. We had those bridges that stick up a little |
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11:03 | We call them subtitle levies on those . And um those are created by |
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11:11 | is being pushed off the platform off leeward margin. And I said some |
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11:16 | it goes over. But if you stuff coming off the platform and you |
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11:21 | a periodic storm come the other direction deep water. You can start to |
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11:25 | up that it was sand along the and that creates this topographic feature that |
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11:31 | call the subtitle levy. Okay, the subtitle Levy might be 6 7 |
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11:38 | of water. And then the adjacent behind it on the platform might be |
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11:42 | or 20 ft of water. So stuff gradually gets pushed to the |
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11:47 | Some goes over and some stays on edge. Okay. And I was |
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11:55 | I told you I just wanted you think about what was developed on the |
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11:59 | . So what would be the fifth if you consider off the platform? |
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12:05 | . The on lapping wedge right, were margin. So Okay. |
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12:22 | Any other questions? Uh huh. . Sure. Okay. Okay, |
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12:35 | we're talking about Andros Island. That the first title flat that I took |
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12:39 | through on the northwest side of Andros . And we started by talking about |
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12:47 | super title levees. Right. And those white features from the air photographs |
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12:53 | were along the channel margins and they best developed on the C word, |
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12:58 | marine side of the tidal flats Because the side that catches the 40-60 winter |
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13:05 | every year in a winter storm as a hurricane. But a winter storm |
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13:10 | water up onto the title flat and get the overbanked deposition on the |
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13:16 | Okay. Yeah, But then the sits high and dry for most of |
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13:20 | time. Right? It's only covered water during a winter storm. So |
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13:24 | could sit high and dry for for or could sit high and dry for |
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13:28 | several months if it's the summer and no hurricanes. Okay. So the |
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13:38 | thing that could live there was that unique cyanobacteria called schism tricks that little |
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13:45 | film that and I told you it deal with One or two of settlement |
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13:51 | down by a winter storm because that's winter storms do. They don't die |
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13:56 | they get covered over, they just back up through that surface and recolonize |
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14:00 | . So the net effect is the of all create millimeter scale stratification. |
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14:07 | more appropriately that is crinkly strong catalytic , right? This is what people |
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14:12 | cryptology eliminations. Alright. And then can happen to that organic material when |
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14:17 | gets a little bit more buried it right through a gang material breaks down |
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14:23 | you give off gas again. I be CO two that could be HQs |
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14:27 | could be uh Yeah um methane And some of that gets trapped in |
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14:34 | sediment as little air bubbles. Well was a type of finessed real fabric |
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14:39 | porosity that we talked about and then some of that leathery met sits high |
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14:48 | dry for a good chunk of the and it's a really hot summer then |
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14:53 | will start to mud crack. But you know if it's too frequently |
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14:57 | , it will never mud crack. you have to be in a time |
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15:01 | where probably the summer where there's no storms. Right? So you don't |
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15:05 | any overbanked deposition. It just sits and dry until the big hurricane |
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15:11 | And sometimes hurricanes don't come for So if it's, it's high and |
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15:15 | in the summer, it's going to dry out in mud crack. All |
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15:18 | . So that's another thing people want see associated with the super title |
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15:25 | And then when the big hurricane comes , what is it going to do |
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15:27 | mud crack fabric, it's going to up some of the mud cracks and |
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15:31 | going to create those, those the common name of flat pebble |
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15:36 | but we call them inter class. ? Uh, a type of non |
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15:41 | grain made one big grain made up smaller grain. So the mud |
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15:45 | Yeah. And then the last attribute be the, the really light color |
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15:51 | with the title flat. Right? you're above water, everything is |
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15:56 | So you end up with that tan whitish color. And I said, |
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16:00 | you looked at the sudden below the , it would have a light gray |
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16:03 | because it's more organic rich is Okay, sometimes in the rock |
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16:10 | the only thing, the only difference see between the super title levy and |
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16:14 | pond or the back slope of the and the subsurface is the color |
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16:19 | We go from gray, total greater tan, greater town. All |
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16:24 | . So you have to catch the in order to see these classical |
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16:29 | Everybody wants to see to say they into a title flat. Okay. |
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16:40 | lot of people struggle with that one . I think so. It's a |
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16:48 | others. Yeah. Well everybody, think a lot of people struggle with |
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17:04 | for using a cycle contact as the for strata, graphic correlation. All |
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17:10 | . So I would review that. , Can you go over 10 D |
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17:21 | D? Yes. Okay. Angela asking to go over 10 d. |
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17:28 | the rationale is remember we talked about two cycle contacts. The major cycle |
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17:34 | . The minor. Alright. And some of you got that right. |
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17:38 | right. Right. Go from very water to really deep water faces. |
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17:43 | a major cycle contact. Go from shallow water faces to a little bit |
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17:48 | water, but not that deep. would be the so called minor cycle |
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17:52 | . So their rationale for for mapping as a timeline for correlation is when |
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17:59 | deepen your first phase of deposition is over some area. Right? And |
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18:07 | it's a big cycle contact, our cycle contact, Well, you flooded |
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18:11 | a huge area. Right? So means that your initial deposition is time |
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18:16 | for the same age over a large . Okay. And so that's that's |
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18:22 | rationale for using as a as a of correlation. Alright. So really |
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18:29 | speaking, what they're saying is the phase of deeper water deposition this time |
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18:34 | over some area and that depends on magnitude of the deepening. Right? |
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18:39 | I said some major cycles correlate for of kilometers or all the way across |
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18:46 | carbonate platform or sometimes all the way the basin, whereas the minor cycle |
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18:51 | sometimes just correlate for hundreds of meters for a few kilometers. Okay. |
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19:01 | um we're gonna talk about some cross at the end of this discussion this |
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19:06 | where I can give you those cross . Of course, essentially you're not |
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19:09 | . So, but they're posted on , you can take a look at |
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19:13 | on blackboard and you can see how , how they built the strata graphic |
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19:19 | this framework. Just using this simple contact relationship. All right. And |
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19:25 | think on the on the cross on the the ones that I |
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19:30 | uh the ones that I posted on , I marked the major cycle |
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19:39 | All right. They're not marked on sheets that I'm going to give you |
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19:43 | . All right. But you can can compare the two and figure that |
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19:47 | . Okay, I'm good. number four. Okay. Question about |
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19:53 | four. Uh huh. Yeah. huh. Yeah, let's say I |
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20:21 | up the number on this. I didn't. Okay. Yeah. |
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20:29 | bank sheds principally lime mud and full sized material from its Leewards from |
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20:34 | margins, what is the result in geometry? That's the on lapping. |
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20:42 | Okay, so toward our end of discussion on the modern carbonate environments, |
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20:54 | showed you three variations. I showed three different aspects of deposition that occur |
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21:01 | off the platform or along the leeward margin. And one of them was |
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21:07 | show you that that on lapping Right, so you under you understand |
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21:13 | that means? I mean that's a like geometries? So trinkets up against |
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21:20 | this is the older platform, it , it's up against the platform like |
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21:23 | . Okay, And I showed you wedge that was 90 m thick, |
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21:30 | up mostly of mud and silt sized . So that was the stuff being |
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21:34 | off on a frequent basis by the easterly trade winds, that those trade |
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21:39 | set up really weak currents that can the mud size material off the |
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21:44 | Okay, so that's another type of . Right. So if somebody |
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21:49 | they have only been wedged geometry. right, okay, so Mhm. |
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21:59 | . Any others? Yeah. All , so, we'll talk a little |
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22:09 | more about the final exam at the of this afternoon. So why don't |
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22:15 | get started here, Dylan, would mind just turn a couple lights off |
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22:23 | of We're going to finish up the end of lecture 17 from last |
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22:31 | And if you recall, we started on a couple of unconventional play types |
|
22:38 | our fault controlled digest plays. And took you through the first example from |
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22:44 | Canada in the Devonian keg River. this is the last slide that I |
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22:49 | you. Right, Okay. And can. What was the point that |
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23:05 | made here was that the reactivated basement did several things to the sequence. |
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23:09 | of all, they help promote And then secondly, they actually brought |
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23:15 | another fluid later to dissolve some of dramatized fabric to create the reservoir |
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23:20 | And then the structuring created these low traps With the 16 - 28 m |
|
23:27 | structural closure. And these are the relief traps that Industry mis identified back |
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23:33 | the 60s and 70s, his baby reefs. And these have nothing to |
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23:37 | with reefs. Okay. These were series of stacked subtitle to title flat |
|
23:45 | that were structured to give you that and for that seismic expression. And |
|
23:50 | to help and trap the hydrocarbon. I mentioned the evidence for the for |
|
23:56 | hot fluids. They're actually hydrothermal fluids out of the basement, right? |
|
24:02 | the reservoir helium. And I may forgot to tell you, I don't |
|
24:06 | now, but I'll tell you now when these when these fluids come up |
|
24:12 | fall plane and they intersect a carrier . In other words, the faces |
|
24:17 | has some reservoir quality already. Those are going to intersect that and they're |
|
24:22 | go laterally. Okay, They're going go laterally like this? And We |
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24:28 | good evidence from are well controlled that fluids have moved at least 2000 ft |
|
24:34 | either side of the faults. So that's felt driven die genesis. |
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24:41 | . And there's other literature and I'm to talk about the Ellenberger and and |
|
24:46 | think we think in the Ellenberger That fluids go out maybe one or 2 |
|
24:53 | from the fall plane and there's there's some literature published them from outcrops in |
|
24:59 | that suggests these fluids can go as as seven miles away from the fall |
|
25:04 | . Okay, So you see how could be important if you're trying to |
|
25:08 | for processing the subsurface, being able map these faults or these conjugate faults |
|
25:14 | are tied to the master rent If you think this is a potential |
|
25:19 | for creating reservoir quality, then you to pay attention to that structure. |
|
25:24 | . Not just to create the structural , but to drive the perhaps favorable |
|
25:30 | development. All right, okay. that that was the keg river. |
|
25:40 | then I wanted to finish up by this with the or division Ellenberger group |
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25:46 | West texas because historically, uh, Ellenberger has gone through history of, |
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25:57 | evolution of thought, if you I mean up until up until the |
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26:02 | the the late eighties? Everybody thought Ellenberger was a fractured carbonate play. |
|
26:09 | right. And now what happened in late 80s, a couple of guys |
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26:13 | the Bureau of Economic Geology here in started pushing the several course model because |
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26:19 | the prevalence of the Brescia fabric and dollar stones. All right. And |
|
26:24 | course they claim that all of He said this is near surface a |
|
26:28 | car certification, which implies essentially most the dye genesis is relatively early. |
|
26:34 | ? And and then later I challenge with my colleague Ian Mirror, who |
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26:43 | involved with the previous study in Western . Because we saw some of the |
|
26:48 | that I worked in west texas. saw fabrics that were very, very |
|
26:52 | to what I just showed you last weekend for the keg river. All |
|
26:57 | . So, I just want to want to take you through this case |
|
27:02 | as much to appreciate the danger of to hang an interpretation on one die |
|
27:09 | fabric because that's basically what these guys done. All right. They see |
|
27:14 | Brescia, they interpret the bread should Carson related near surface karst and they |
|
27:20 | explain the rest of the digest fabrics this model. Okay, so |
|
27:25 | this is like we were talking about . Right? Oh, I found |
|
27:28 | found secondary porosity. Oh, it be fresh water. Right. Because |
|
27:33 | to that point, everybody thought it that was the only way to make |
|
27:36 | prostate. But we talked about three ways now. Right, two or |
|
27:42 | freshwater and marine barrel die genesis. I showed you could create secondary process |
|
27:47 | death. So you can't just build whole interpretation around one fabric. All |
|
27:52 | . And that's that's sort of the of the theme here for this for |
|
27:57 | discussion. All right. So the in west texas, you can see |
|
28:03 | distribution of the trend here. It uh in an area that later developed |
|
28:09 | be the central basin platform. um during the or division, this |
|
28:15 | exist as a positive feature. All . And this was a ramp coming |
|
28:19 | of the Atlanta uplift over here to over here to the east. |
|
28:24 | And we talked about the land of , influencing austin chalk deposition. |
|
28:28 | it influenced uh huh uh Lord of and or division uh deposition as |
|
28:36 | And then this is what would become people call the midland basin. |
|
28:41 | And you can see the people have Most of the production. That's 1.5 |
|
28:47 | barrels of oil to the so called related phenomena. And then they've related |
|
28:53 | to just other Dulles stones, but to the same degree. All |
|
28:59 | So, I've superimposed the central basin over this. This is actually not |
|
29:06 | diagram. This is charlie Karen's is of the principles that pushed this model |
|
29:11 | several cars development. All right. this is just I've just recovered his |
|
29:17 | , but you can see the, can see where most of the pools |
|
29:21 | . Right. Just remember that This not a positive feature when Ellenberger production |
|
29:26 | established in these black blobs. And then what's not shown over here |
|
29:31 | the eastern shelf production. There is over here on the eastern shelf as |
|
29:35 | ramp down into deeper water. here's the controversy is you know what's |
|
29:41 | the reservoir colonies, Dola stones? It's just a simple fractured reservoir where |
|
29:48 | need a dual porosity system of fractures matrix porosity. There is matrix |
|
29:53 | There's no question about that. Or this simply a several cars play where |
|
29:58 | create the car certification and either produced so called cavernous ferocity or you create |
|
30:05 | fractures. You create fractures above the because of the weakening of the structure |
|
30:11 | the rock above the cars fabric. , Or is a deep barrel diabetic |
|
30:17 | . That's linked back to like back some sort of faulting. Alright, |
|
30:24 | this is this is the model that guys have used. So you're gonna |
|
30:27 | names, You're gonna see Charlie Karen's here. You're going to see Bob |
|
30:32 | . Name here, Robert Hanford, are guys that now for the last |
|
30:38 | years to push this car's model Not just the Ellenberger for basically any |
|
30:44 | carbonate sequence where you see where you Brescia. Alright, So everything is |
|
30:50 | around the branches that you see here core. Right? And plus, |
|
30:53 | know, there is missing section on of the of the Ellenberger. There's |
|
30:58 | no question about that. But the is, why is there missing |
|
31:03 | Alright. Did you erode it during exposure? And usually you don't do |
|
31:10 | . A carbon, a succession. talked about how water just goes through |
|
31:14 | you just, you know, it dissolve it and curse if I it |
|
31:18 | you don't usually strip off a bunch settlement with several exposure or was it |
|
31:24 | just deposited? Right. Was it always out of water for a long |
|
31:29 | of time? And you never it's the surface of non deposition. And |
|
31:34 | it was a drier climate, you necessarily get a lot of early freshwater |
|
31:39 | . Right. But you know, you read their papers, they go |
|
31:43 | a lot of detail about all these cave models. Right? They actually |
|
31:48 | the cave systems in the modern and . Seems to be their analogue for |
|
31:53 | Ellenberger. But the problem here is you're going to see in a minute |
|
31:58 | where are all the other k fabrics Brescia? All right, that's a |
|
32:04 | problem. Right. Because you caves are not just Brescia. |
|
32:10 | I'll address this in a minute. and then why don't you get these |
|
32:17 | developed in the limestone? There are stones in the Ellenberger that are not |
|
32:21 | monetized, you don't ever see Brescia those fabrics. It's all only confined |
|
32:27 | the dullest own fabrics. And the . Alright, so you can see |
|
32:32 | model here is they don't, for most part they don't associate reservoir quality |
|
32:37 | the so called K Phil, which the brunch zone that looks like this |
|
32:41 | core and for the obvious reasons what's this stuff in? It's all this |
|
32:45 | greenish gray play. These are allied smack type plays all right. And |
|
32:52 | iron rich and they're green. So, I guess the first question |
|
32:57 | if this is all done in fresh and there's iron in the system, |
|
33:01 | didn't you oxidize this stuff? Nobody ever been able to demonstrate reddish discoloration |
|
33:09 | this fabric. It's always the greenish color, which is the reduced |
|
33:14 | All right. And then they actually that the porosity is associated with fracturing |
|
33:22 | some dissolution up here above the cave . This is what they call the |
|
33:27 | roof. They say, go find Brescia and drill this and you'll find |
|
33:30 | reservoir. Okay, that's basically their . Right? Play the cars and |
|
33:37 | right on top of that car service the fractures and any porosity. And |
|
33:43 | don't they do in their model? don't explain any of the timing of |
|
33:49 | demonization? I guess you have to that somehow the dolomite form first before |
|
33:56 | , right? Because it's all Ified. These are these arrays are |
|
34:00 | Brescia class or their church class that worked in with some of the dolomite |
|
34:06 | . So I guess you know what's and they but they never talk about |
|
34:10 | is what is the timing of the , right? They don't try to |
|
34:16 | it out. Right. Even though some old published papers uh from some |
|
34:22 | that were actually at U. University of texas, that suggests that |
|
34:26 | of these Dolomites and Ellenberger were probably alright, based on the geochemistry. |
|
34:34 | , so I showed you this picture . Right? With the with the |
|
34:38 | system and you know, the I you cave is not just a big |
|
34:44 | , right? It back fills with own cement created by dissolution. So |
|
34:50 | expect there to be stalactites and stalagmites stone and things like that. |
|
34:56 | that's never been documented in any of stuff that locks and Karens have published |
|
35:02 | . And then with with other would you get here? You would |
|
35:06 | you would get cave sediment alright. some of it would be uh perched |
|
35:15 | , Some of it would be some the sort of occur in shelter pockets |
|
35:21 | things like that because you're creating that of fabric on the sea floor, |
|
35:25 | should see evidence of early cement All right. And I I took |
|
35:31 | through the place too soon. We're talking about the physical expressions of |
|
35:36 | exposure, had a cave system here then you might go a few more |
|
35:41 | before we hit another case system And what was happening to the country |
|
35:46 | . It was undergoing freshwater die genesis it wasn't cursed. It was fabric |
|
35:51 | die genesis right. Where the Reagan leached out and then you generate pre |
|
35:56 | cements. So that's what you should away from these branches owns the. |
|
36:01 | never documented that and I guess they tried because it's stolen. Might write |
|
36:07 | . Always presented a challenge of trying figure out petra graphically wouldn't replace. |
|
36:12 | what was the timing of the replacement and group stops preserve this so well |
|
36:29 | mad calcite. Okay. And some it be micro crystalline, some would |
|
36:35 | coarser crystalline fabric and some of it be. Remember the the fan shaped |
|
36:44 | . Sometimes you can make those fan crystals from calcite. Actually can you |
|
36:49 | you can have sometimes a reaganite form some of these case systems but it's |
|
36:53 | Loma calcite and of course of his , what should happen to it? |
|
36:59 | re crystallize or dissolve out. so let me let me address a |
|
37:08 | of issues here. Right again. the first big issue is the origin |
|
37:14 | this greenish gray clay that I showed in there and their core photograph of |
|
37:18 | Brescia uh from the work that we in on the eastern shelf. Karen's |
|
37:27 | locks that mostly work the other side the midland basin corresponding to where the |
|
37:34 | basin platform developed. But when you at you look at these greenish gray |
|
37:40 | uh most of these things are not , all their die genetic. |
|
37:46 | And the evidence for that is you them lining a bunch of parts of |
|
37:51 | pores, right? They're not filling the bottom up is what you should |
|
37:54 | if that's deposition all clay. And I think here's the clincher that you |
|
38:01 | see a fracture cutting a style T. And it's filled in with |
|
38:05 | material, the same material. And fractures feed into zones like this or |
|
38:10 | like this. Okay so and it's that a lot of these brunches we'll |
|
38:19 | about this where you have these branches . The dolomite fabric is associated with |
|
38:25 | is undergoing some dissolution. Alright so got to be explained as well. |
|
38:33 | their support is really as I said on the presence of the Brescia and |
|
38:39 | fact that there's a missing section here I I hope I convinced you earlier |
|
38:46 | were talking about Dolomites that you can breadth of the forms of depth. |
|
38:52 | ? And because of the relationship of style lights within the breath to class |
|
38:58 | each other and the horizon right there the different angles to each other and |
|
39:03 | horizon. So you can't just use by itself to say that's uniquely indicative |
|
39:09 | fresh water Your surface car certification. , so let me take you through |
|
39:16 | case study and that there is a on black board that it was put |
|
39:24 | to contrast what I showed you for keg river in Canada with what we |
|
39:28 | in the Ellenberger on the eastern All right. And so structurally. |
|
39:36 | see the little blue blue star in red star here. These are the |
|
39:41 | fields that I focused on. It's of a consulting project initially and these |
|
39:51 | fields are called Withers and Suggs. . And I want you to appreciate |
|
39:54 | close they are. You can see two miles. So it's About two |
|
39:59 | a little bit more away from this wrench fault system called the Fort Chadbourne |
|
40:04 | . Okay, So this is a master wrench fault system. I remember |
|
40:09 | our conversation last weekend about the keg , you have different contact false systems |
|
40:16 | come off of the master ranch. High Angles 70 90° and then summit |
|
40:21 | angle 20-30° off of that. All . And and there's core data for |
|
40:29 | of the wells listed here and that's I focused on my study because I |
|
40:38 | involved in a study where two clients supporting the study. One client thought |
|
40:45 | was near surface cursed. The other didn't know what it was, but |
|
40:48 | wanted an evaluation and so that's where of this work came from. All |
|
40:55 | . So these are some of the arguments against the several chorus model for |
|
41:01 | for the Ellenberger. Again, Karst dissolution, segmentation, not just |
|
41:08 | In fact, it usually doesn't involve because the fluid just go straight down |
|
41:12 | the carbonate rock to create a freshwater if it's raining and then you start |
|
41:17 | and cementing, right? And curse not just this curse is not just |
|
41:24 | to one de positional faces, It cuts a bunch of deposition all |
|
41:29 | . And that's not what these guys documenting their showing. They're showing the |
|
41:35 | is limited to certain zones within the . And again, they don't even |
|
41:40 | what the faces are because they didn't to look through the masking effects of |
|
41:44 | demonization and curse fabric should not be uniform thickness regionally as they map it |
|
41:52 | based on what we see in Carson is like the Pleistocene. All |
|
41:57 | And certainly Karst caves are not laterally . I mentioned that cave here, |
|
42:02 | over here. All right. And no bit drops to support the presence |
|
42:07 | caverns proxy. Um And then the effects. You'd expect them to be |
|
42:13 | right at the top of the Actually, they're all through the Ellenberger |
|
42:18 | a lot of times when you look the top of the Ellenberger, you |
|
42:20 | see any kind of of course if sometimes several 100 ft in to the |
|
42:26 | succession. All right. And then a list of I'm not going to |
|
42:33 | these because I'm going to show you of this. But basically, this |
|
42:36 | further arguments from the core data against against the cars model, but not |
|
42:43 | mentioned a couple here again. No formation, no open cavernous porosity, |
|
42:49 | shelter processing of perch sediments, which what you should see in a cave |
|
42:54 | that forms early. Okay, I mentioned the greenest shales there never They're |
|
43:00 | reddish. They should be if they they were introduced during fresh water. |
|
43:06 | right. And then on a finer , the photography suggests, first of |
|
43:12 | that there is no near surface pre segmentation prior to the demonization. The |
|
43:19 | replacement Dolomites are burial for the I'll show you in a minute. |
|
43:24 | the fractures that feed these car, called karst intervals. The fractures that |
|
43:30 | that cut the barrel Dolomites or they style lights, you know that these |
|
43:35 | are coming in at depth. And then I'm going to show you |
|
43:39 | church here. Uh, the guys the bureau say the church is coming |
|
43:44 | during that regional drop in sea Right? Just being washed in by |
|
43:49 | processes and introduced into some of the systems, but I'm going to show |
|
43:54 | that most of the church are actually reworked. Older fragments that are that |
|
44:00 | already buried to some degree because they pressure solution effects before they got introduced |
|
44:07 | the so called curse or Brescia Right? So think about this. |
|
44:13 | . What remember what I said about pathogenic courts and churches, Church is |
|
44:17 | type of pathogenic courts. Every author courts has to precipitate from acidic |
|
44:24 | But where you see most of the , especially the replacement sure is around |
|
44:28 | areas. Appreciation. All right, of makes sense. Right, acid |
|
44:34 | and and I told my dissolution on big enough scale to give appreciation. |
|
44:40 | right. And then away from the called curse the features you see fabric |
|
44:48 | dissolution of the dramatized fabric. And implies again, a faces control, |
|
44:53 | is not an element of the cars . Right? The cars models should |
|
44:56 | across a number of different deposition, faces. Okay, so you can |
|
45:04 | can read these slides for yourself. me just show you some of the |
|
45:09 | . All right. We're able to uh, at least one chord contact |
|
45:16 | the Ellenberger Dola stone, which is fabric right here. And you can |
|
45:21 | it's by attributed but it's got some micro skylights to run through it. |
|
45:26 | can see a little bit of dissolution , but none of this is none |
|
45:29 | this approach is what we talked about classical physical expression of longer term. |
|
45:34 | barrel exposure. Right? Where's the crossed? Where's the soil crust, |
|
45:39 | the reddish discoloration and then sitting right top of the black shells in this |
|
45:45 | pennsylvania, black shells and sometimes there different kind of shales, different age |
|
45:50 | . They might be mississippian, but there pennsylvania. All right. And |
|
45:57 | the Brescia and in the course that worked, we did encounter Brescia and |
|
46:03 | look like this in core. And looks like betting in the Brescia |
|
46:08 | but it's actually fine scale micro style and whispering microsd highlights And again, |
|
46:15 | Brescia class at all different angles to other and the horizon. Well, |
|
46:20 | was the evidence we talked about couple weekends ago for barrel demonization on a |
|
46:26 | dissolution on a bigger scale. You can't do this unless you invoke |
|
46:32 | yo tectonics right? Or you bury rock right? And set up the |
|
46:38 | solution. The demonization then pop it up to the surface and Karst ify |
|
46:42 | . So there's there's again there's no of yo yo tectonics for this part |
|
46:46 | the west texas. All right. then you can see even some of |
|
46:50 | breadth of plaster suit you together by solution. All right. That that |
|
46:56 | tell you anything in terms of But the key, the key point |
|
46:59 | to see the the micro stylist at different angles to each other and the |
|
47:06 | . And then look at the matrix nights that are associated are associated in |
|
47:12 | proximity to the so called curse related . The Brescia. This some of |
|
47:19 | fabrics are politic. Some of the are political pack stones. Some of |
|
47:23 | you're going to see your tidal So these are sort of not a |
|
47:29 | uh upper camera into lower or division de positional cycles that repeat over and |
|
47:34 | again. But the point here is you have to look at it with |
|
47:39 | white paper technique or the fluorescence. then you see the rally grains and |
|
47:44 | see sutra grain contacts between those p . So that was our timing |
|
47:50 | Right? The fact that the grains so future together tells you that decolonization |
|
47:54 | to be burial right? If it's formed, you freeze that fabric in |
|
47:59 | . All right. And then in of the Dulles stone, she had |
|
48:03 | mixed in. So there's the dolomite and here's a little bit of courts |
|
48:09 | in. Look at the future in the court screens. That doesn't make |
|
48:13 | sense for the stolen might to be formed. Right with court with |
|
48:18 | All courts. Right? So the here is that the dolomite came in |
|
48:24 | replaced the limestone after it already been right to account for the grain. |
|
48:29 | grain stuttering and the carbonates, but to account for the grand grand stuttering |
|
48:33 | the courts grants All right. And I mentioned charges mixed in with some |
|
48:39 | the breath zones. You get these class of church that replaced and Hewlett |
|
48:46 | grain stone. But look at this incorporated in the british it. But |
|
48:51 | at the individual class are made up ideas that are already structured before they |
|
48:57 | replaced by church. Okay, Yes, it's all micro crystalline |
|
49:04 | Right. So, sometimes micro crystalline will perfectly preserved the fabric. Sometimes |
|
49:09 | can mass. They can mask the . Okay, us still encourage. |
|
49:19 | just telling you that that you had come in to these areas of |
|
49:27 | All right. And it had some class, whether there are limestone or |
|
49:32 | stones when they got replaced by That's another question. All right. |
|
49:38 | it's telling you how to civic fluids in. All right. So, |
|
49:44 | can only precipitate for massive fluids. right. Any author genic courts can |
|
49:49 | precipitate for massive food. Okay, , this doesn't make any sense for |
|
49:54 | to be a near surface course Right. They would say these church |
|
50:01 | came in as little Flavell deposits when Ellenberger was exposed and being Kearse |
|
50:07 | And some of it just washed in the cave system. How could |
|
50:13 | how could you press your solve that before it got washed in? You |
|
50:17 | All right. See what I'm So this is right. These are |
|
50:23 | are class that got introduced. Uh of the sequence that got introduced into |
|
50:30 | bread should depth after the after the had already been buried. And then |
|
50:36 | of the church is massive in what call trip politic church trip politic means |
|
50:41 | forest church and some of the stuff actually be oil and gas productive. |
|
50:47 | you can see it replacing some of dullest on fabric here with preservation of |
|
50:52 | remnant microsd highlights. And then you how they fade away. So that's |
|
50:58 | timing indicator. Again that the church the stolen ties fabric at depth. |
|
51:04 | then where we see church coming in this nearby we see a lot of |
|
51:11 | dissolution, which makes sense. That's how you dissolved carbonate with acid |
|
51:16 | . So the two seem to be hand in an all right. And |
|
51:24 | there's a fracture story here for what going to show you the I said |
|
51:29 | crossing the brush zones, if there crossing the bridge zones, it's usually |
|
51:34 | back to the late church fabrics that emplaced. Um the porosity away from |
|
51:41 | french zones is is is very similar what I showed you for the keg |
|
51:48 | . That is that the Ellenberger had been demonetized to some degree. And |
|
51:53 | another fluid came through to start dissolving out to create the final ferocity. |
|
51:59 | this is what you see in terms the ferocity away from the bridge |
|
52:03 | you see people would historically called dougie . A lot of this, so |
|
52:09 | buggy process. When you look at with a white paper technique is molding |
|
52:13 | solution. Large molded ferocity and then see fabric that looks like like proxy |
|
52:19 | like this and some of this is financial process. Some of this again |
|
52:24 | created by told my dissolution and you you can see this in, you |
|
52:31 | see this in thin section or the lab will start first with the course |
|
52:36 | , you see these large grains here the darker dramatized fabric. Those are |
|
52:41 | inter class to rip up class. talked about associated with parts of the |
|
52:45 | flat, these are very common in lower or division. They're called flat |
|
52:50 | conglomerates. Alright. And then look the look at the porosity, it's |
|
52:56 | same story we developed last the last for the keg river and we talked |
|
53:03 | for dolomite dissolution. The porosity is confined to the centers of grains. |
|
53:08 | random. And when you look along edges of this poor system you see |
|
53:13 | dolomite dissolution. So this is this a fabric that got dramatized first and |
|
53:19 | later another fluid came through to leech out and here you can see analytic |
|
53:24 | Hewlett grain stone here that's not replaced church and you can see some of |
|
53:28 | ghost fabrics in a normal thin but you see the fabric even better |
|
53:33 | and more importantly, I think you the ferocity relationships some of that |
|
53:37 | Primary process still between the grains and some of this is due to dissolution |
|
53:43 | those dramatized Do IDs or P. . Alright, so there's a lot |
|
53:48 | fabric selective ferocity here than the curse implies. The curse of Allah doesn't |
|
53:53 | any fabric selective ferocity. Alright. . Just a couple more examples |
|
54:00 | Again, sometimes you don't appreciate the from a normal thin section view, |
|
54:05 | when you apply the white paper you see how you can see the |
|
54:09 | of the grain here. That's another of these inter class with a ferocity |
|
54:15 | then you can pick up the S. And P. Lloyd's that |
|
54:17 | don't see very easily here. again, we talked about these cloudy |
|
54:22 | dolomite crystals and how everybody relates it to some sort of political fabric. |
|
54:30 | , that's just an artifact of the of the crystal wright, whatever replaces |
|
54:34 | always darker color in the center, becomes lighter color and as you go |
|
54:38 | from it. All right. And a tremendous amount of other styles of |
|
54:44 | dissolution. Some of those buggy pores I showed you in the core sample |
|
54:48 | you look along the edges of those those that larger buggy porosity, you |
|
54:55 | dolomite crystals being dissolved out to varying . All right. And some of |
|
55:00 | are barrel Dolomites because they're saddled Remember we talked the saddle is always |
|
55:05 | barrel dolomite. So some of these the sweeping extinction that characterizes the saddle |
|
55:12 | and you can see, I think have to agree here, there's been |
|
55:16 | degree of dolomite dissolution. And then of these saddle Dolomites are iron |
|
55:22 | So the blue here is a the blue color here, a little bit |
|
55:29 | are different than the blue ferocity. a special stage for iron rich |
|
55:34 | Alright, these are iron ridge So, again, the fact that |
|
55:39 | saddles tells you its burial, but all of these are saddled, but |
|
55:43 | fact that there aren't rich tells you didn't form in a near surface |
|
55:48 | Iron Rich requires reducing fluids. You have to do that in the |
|
55:52 | . You can't do that in the surface oxidized setting, but they to |
|
55:57 | dissolved out. And then look at of the matrix Dolomites here they whatever |
|
56:03 | replaced. Whether it's more the critical and Pakistan fabric, or whether it's |
|
56:08 | dole stones that I showed you earlier tidal flats. You see corrosion of |
|
56:13 | Dolomites. Alright, that's dissolution. here it is. In the |
|
56:17 | you can see the closer view of fabric. Okay, All of this |
|
56:21 | to be explained. Right? The model doesn't explain this at all. |
|
56:24 | . Doesn't even address the fact that is substantial dissolution of dramatized fabric. |
|
56:32 | . And then what is the evidence the influence of those of that master |
|
56:38 | fault or its conjugate false systems? , in core, we see the |
|
56:44 | style lights Remember the significance of vertical , compression stresses like this. |
|
56:51 | Most style lights are parallel to betting your principal stress directions from the top |
|
56:58 | . But we had vertical tectonics We had horizontal fractures and cross cutting |
|
57:05 | . Right? That are filled with type of cement. So their natural |
|
57:10 | . And then I don't I don't if I mentioned twinning with the significance |
|
57:15 | 20 nas and carbonates. But the the only carbonate mineral that's supposed to |
|
57:21 | susceptible to twinning is cal side. right. But some of our dolomite |
|
57:27 | showed twinning. And so that suggested they were probably twin cal sites to |
|
57:32 | with and then they got replaced by . So, what is the significance |
|
57:36 | 2020 is a distortion of the calcite . It's not a it's not related |
|
57:44 | burial because it was related simply to and stressed during burial, all the |
|
57:50 | should be twinned, but they're Okay, so the implication is that |
|
57:54 | these twin cal sites formed, they under some sort of stress compression will |
|
58:00 | and that's where the tectonic part of story may come in. Okay, |
|
58:06 | , very common relationship in the sorry, is to see something like |
|
58:12 | , where the the secondary porosity. it's a buggy, true buggy porosity |
|
58:18 | solution. Large molded ferocity. It's intersected by numerous little healed fractures. |
|
58:24 | right. And these fractures really pop with the white paper technique which is |
|
58:28 | this view is here. And these are horizontal so that you can see |
|
58:33 | tectonic relationship right? When you see relationship like this where the fractures dead |
|
58:39 | into secondary proxy. That suggests a relationship. And again the fact that |
|
58:45 | are horizontal means that they're tectonic, ? They're linked back to that master |
|
58:50 | fault system or probably more likely to false system that comes off of |
|
58:56 | Okay. And then the evidence for barrel dissolution of the Dolomites. It's |
|
59:04 | the same relationships we talked about earlier both limestone. Yeah barrel dissolution |
|
59:12 | Secondary Torossian lime stones at depth. also the same for Dola stones. |
|
59:18 | some of the simple relationships are like see in this core piece here a |
|
59:22 | I. T. Is coming along . It's cut out by buggy paparazzi |
|
59:27 | filled with drilling clay. And then pick up the style light on the |
|
59:31 | side. Right? Very simple cross relationship that has to be burial the |
|
59:37 | to cut out part of that style in the dolomite. Alright and then |
|
59:42 | a dolomite again you can see the light here it comes up like this |
|
59:47 | you can see this solution along the light. You can see preservation of |
|
59:51 | personally dissolved dolomite along the style those are the other indicators right? |
|
59:57 | this is burial dissolution again if that early foreign ferocity. And then you |
|
60:02 | it and pressure solve it. You see preferential segmentation along the style |
|
60:08 | But you don't see that. And then of course we had lots |
|
60:13 | saddle Dolomites here as either poor filling or Yeah, as replacement fabric and |
|
60:21 | of it was leashed as I talked before. In fact, you see |
|
60:26 | I think I mentioned this earlier When you get this kind of fabric |
|
60:29 | it steps back, see the little back on some of the crystals. |
|
60:33 | the typical way that saddled all night in the subsurface. It doesn't dissolve |
|
60:38 | a continuous front. It does it a stepwise fashion. All right. |
|
60:43 | all these little features like you see where the crystal steps back and comes |
|
60:49 | out. That's a dissolution phenomena. , So both the cement and the |
|
60:55 | of saddle Dolomites are being dissolved And then I guess, you |
|
61:00 | just to complete the story then the will be, well, what's driving |
|
61:03 | stolen my dissolution? Well, we about the keg river in Canada. |
|
61:09 | was driven either by passage of hot calcium rich fluids. All right. |
|
61:16 | we talked about what calcium rich fluids dissolve dolomite. We also said there |
|
61:21 | evidence for late stage thermo chemical sulfate . A mechanism to generate high |
|
61:28 | two s. and dissolve the carbonate way. Well here in the |
|
61:33 | we have a little bit of late and hydrate that fills some of the |
|
61:38 | like you see here on the and some of that's clearly been dissolved |
|
61:42 | or cannibalized. So, it's possible could have some TSR here. But |
|
61:48 | was more common was to see relationships this in the court, we had |
|
61:54 | scale buggy porosity later filled in with macro cal sites. That's what the |
|
61:59 | stain is for. But look at causal relationship. It's fed by |
|
62:05 | Right? So that's delivering the calcium fluid that promotes the calcite. And |
|
62:10 | know, this is burial because those cut a style light. Okay, |
|
62:15 | here's an unstained part of a core calcite fabric to because I put put |
|
62:22 | on that and that is is all . But here's the stain that shows |
|
62:25 | that relationship. All right. that's going to explain potentially some of |
|
62:30 | dolomite dissolution. But remember, you needed the Civic fluids for a pathogenic |
|
62:36 | , precipitation. So, there may another mechanism like TSR that's also generating |
|
62:42 | acidic fluid. There's probably not one of just dissolution. Alright. Because |
|
62:47 | faults can reactivate periodically and every time reactivate, potentially they could deliver some |
|
62:54 | fluid. All right. And we have some evidence for lead zinc mineralization |
|
62:59 | the Ellenberger. Again, this is stain to show you the in this |
|
63:04 | the weekly iron rich cal sites. the purple fabric. And then look |
|
63:11 | the iron rich dolomite here. That's blue stain for iron in dolomite. |
|
63:16 | not much for us in this view . But then you pick up iron |
|
63:20 | , black crystals. You pick ups right, remember that zinc sulfide |
|
63:24 | Where does that come from? It from underlying basement rock. Right. |
|
63:29 | , you've got all these inter relationships . That suggests the involvement of some |
|
63:34 | of hot at least hot fluid coming along these reactivated basement faults. |
|
63:40 | I ran I ran some geochemistry on calle sites and Dolomites. And you |
|
63:45 | see the especially the cal sites are to very, very negative values. |
|
63:51 | when you're when you're carbon isotopes are of in this fairway right here, |
|
63:58 | more What we call depleted in terms the oxygen 18 isotope, then, |
|
64:05 | usually taken to be a reflection of higher temperature precipitation. Alright, we |
|
64:10 | do any fluid inclusion analysis. I not stay for sure that this is |
|
64:15 | fluids. You'd have to go a further than I did, but But |
|
64:20 | hot fluids coming in. I that's implied by the fact that you've |
|
64:24 | these fractures with cal size cutting Right? So, you're buried to |
|
64:28 | depth. You know that from that . All right. So, these |
|
64:33 | the inferred controls on the reservoir It's tie back, ultimately to the |
|
64:40 | fracture system. Right? Linked either the master wrench fault system or conjugal |
|
64:45 | coming off that We didn't have any D seismic. We have any access |
|
64:51 | seismic to really show you the what the false systems look like. |
|
64:57 | . And whether there are any contract that actually cut through these little |
|
65:01 | uh, but then the fluids were so at least warm, maybe |
|
65:08 | Who knows if they're hydrothermal, we'll know it until we do the |
|
65:13 | But direct evidence for a civic That would be again, the author |
|
65:17 | ports, but also some of the zinc minerals that we talked about. |
|
65:22 | . And then certainly calcium rich fluids through these rocks because of the presence |
|
65:27 | the late stage cal sites. All . All right. So that's a |
|
65:33 | . The bottom line is that everything just showed you for the Ellenberger is |
|
65:38 | similar to what I showed you for keg river in Alberta. Uh |
|
65:45 | we don't have in the Ellenberger or of the other unique indicators that implicate |
|
65:50 | of frenetic basement rock, like the and stuff like that. But but |
|
65:58 | , you know, this is not say that it's my way or the |
|
66:02 | . He should never say that in . Right? But That's sort of |
|
66:07 | locks and Karens have done for the 25 years. Right. Uh There |
|
66:13 | other ways to explain what's going on these sequences is not all near surface |
|
66:18 | genesis. Right. I'm not, not going to say that there couldn't |
|
66:21 | some near surface Carson, the I'm just saying that they haven't demonstrated |
|
66:26 | yet. All right. In I was at a core conference with |
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66:31 | back in the 90s to talk about and carbonates and we brought our cores |
|
66:37 | this conference, right. I had stepped down from Calgary for the keg |
|
66:42 | , he had some of his Ellenberger brought over. This is a meeting |
|
66:45 | New Orleans and I said, come over, look at my stuff |
|
66:49 | . I found some really neat stuff I showed him the keg river with |
|
66:54 | and the branches with the the style a little different angles and he |
|
66:59 | oh yeah, that's got to be Brescia. And then we went and |
|
67:02 | at his core and I found the thing in his core. Mm I |
|
67:06 | know about that. Yes, he's the same kind of stuff. All |
|
67:12 | . But you know, the problem when these guys push a model so |
|
67:17 | , right, they built their reputation it, they're reluctant to back off |
|
67:22 | it. And that's unfortunate. now there is some, I think |
|
67:29 | people would call more near surface Karst modification in this part of west |
|
67:34 | but it's not in the Ellenberger, in a younger Permian sequence called the |
|
67:38 | Andreas. Alright. And there's there's a famous Little platform down here |
|
67:44 | the south of the central basin And uh and there's a giant oldfield |
|
67:51 | Yates field that produces from this. as part of another part of this |
|
67:56 | succession. And they've got again, several cars to associate with that With |
|
68:02 | pretty substantial reserves. I mean, at 4.3 billion barrels of oil in |
|
68:07 | . All right. And this is old field discovered back in the 20s |
|
68:11 | still flow still producing today. All . And you can, you can |
|
68:17 | drive by the field area. It's a little town called Ira an which |
|
68:25 | If you go out interstate 10 toward Paso and you turn off and go |
|
68:31 | midland, you'll go through that little of our Iran and you'll go buy |
|
68:36 | little maces and the maces are just with producing wells. That's, that's |
|
68:42 | field. All right, mm Now I've seen some of the |
|
68:47 | I knew Dexter Craig and he worked marathon and I think I mentioned my |
|
68:53 | consulting project was looking at ST andrews from a different field than, but |
|
68:59 | working on, but we're in the core warehouse. I was working on |
|
69:04 | Seminole field stuff. He was working the 8's field. So he showed |
|
69:09 | some of his core and uh, think I told him this, I |
|
69:14 | , yeah, I had Brescia but I didn't think he had anything |
|
69:19 | looked striking the near surface, You had the bread to class. |
|
69:23 | didn't see anything with rotated class silence or anything like that. But |
|
69:28 | branches again were filled with this greenish clay. Right? You didn't see |
|
69:31 | reddish discoloration and things like that. yeah. Anyway, that's, that's |
|
69:38 | , you've got to be careful with so called cars plays. It's not |
|
69:42 | just to identify the Brescia. You've to go look at some of the |
|
69:46 | rock in order to understand what's going here. Okay, You can't pick |
|
69:52 | choose one fabric and say, that's the interpretation. Whatever your digest |
|
69:57 | is, it's got to consistently explain the fabrics in these, in these |
|
70:02 | . Okay. We'll see. Costa blanca, offshore spain and and |
|
70:14 | . Uh, yeah, in the , in the mediterranean and um, |
|
70:22 | people are actually relooking the Casablanca and think are starting to come up with |
|
70:27 | story that is probably more burial related and not narrow surface cars, but |
|
70:32 | older literature implies it's all near surface . Okay. All right. So |
|
70:40 | finish up here and we'll take a little break here. All right. |
|
70:44 | taken you through the conventional unconventional play . And so I hope now you |
|
70:50 | a feel for the importance of your . All setting. You have a |
|
70:55 | for the importance of your, your topography. You have a feel for |
|
71:00 | more global fizzy graphic setting where you're in sat relative to the equator and |
|
71:06 | effect if any you had from the trade winds. Right? Whether they |
|
71:10 | the easterly trade winds or whether you're a cooler water climate and they were |
|
71:16 | . Alright. And I've given you bibliography that breaks out the play types |
|
71:23 | these lines here. And even though didn't formally talk about uh these little |
|
71:29 | unconventional play types, I said most these with the exception of the |
|
71:36 | well even the microbe, the exception sure of the liquor store in |
|
71:40 | Most of these are one of these play types modified by fractures or by |
|
71:45 | or by shirt replacement. Okay, and then it's interesting that there hasn't |
|
71:53 | any recent update. This is the paper I can find where people actually |
|
72:00 | the percentage of discovery carbonate place. this is, This is my old |
|
72:05 | from graduate school James Lee Wilson, published his paper in 81 and he's |
|
72:11 | last person at least publicly too summarize percentage of the place. And you |
|
72:16 | see Up to the 80s up to early 80s, where was all the |
|
72:22 | along the platform margin. Right, for high energy reefs and high energy |
|
72:26 | stands, things that had good seismic . And then you can see less |
|
72:32 | chasing the on lapping debris sheets or Sakas or even ferocity beneath some of |
|
72:39 | UN conformity ease and of course the back then were made up a small |
|
72:46 | . So nobody has updated this. there's certainly been a shift toward more |
|
72:51 | production because of the push of resource because everybody lumps the chalk eagle for |
|
72:57 | chalk lumps that into resource play. I guess we just have to wait |
|
73:02 | see how things have changed. But , I haven't seen anybody update this |
|
73:07 | since 81. And then I want to appreciate that a lot of these |
|
73:13 | and a lot of companies don't want play carbonates for a couple of reasons |
|
73:16 | the first reason they don't want to it is the digest is too |
|
73:20 | Right? It's hard to predict process of the drill bit. Well, |
|
73:26 | mean, I think you can say for most plastic reservoirs to right. |
|
73:29 | have been struggling for decades trying to ferocity headed the drill bit for sand |
|
73:34 | . All right. But the other that scares them is they don't think |
|
73:39 | gonna they don't think they're going to much hydrocarbon. Alright, unless they're |
|
73:45 | . All right. And so I this together for a talk I gave |
|
73:50 | in town years ago and these are talked about three of these examples poza |
|
73:57 | from Mexico that was the on lapping sheet, shut off the labour margin |
|
74:02 | field and black Lakefield or those platform carbonates that are developed up on a |
|
74:08 | carbonate platform, You know 82 over km or more in from the open |
|
74:15 | . So, we talked about the of the trade winds and driving the |
|
74:19 | for this. We didn't talk about feel this is a giant oil field |
|
74:24 | the Middle East off of Dubai. one of these platform margin rudest reef |
|
74:30 | . All right. And so look look at the porosity. The average |
|
74:36 | not incredibly high. All right. the perms are not incredibly high |
|
74:41 | I mean, You can see the for fat is only 30 million |
|
74:46 | Alright, fairway field, Yeah. perms are pretty small oil in |
|
74:54 | Giant oilfields to pretty good size smaller fields. All right. And then |
|
74:59 | at the ultimate recovery efficiency, 42 Over 50%. That's pretty |
|
75:05 | All right. And none of these the characteristics of fracture assistant production. |
|
75:11 | don't show the gusher rate for a months and then a rapid decline and |
|
75:16 | term stabilized production. All right. showed this and they just stay at |
|
75:21 | rate for years. Okay. I want you to appreciate that. |
|
75:27 | then I want to finish up this by getting you to appreciate some of |
|
75:33 | questions that you you should think about you ever get involved in expiration or |
|
75:38 | we call more regional exploitation in a that's a little bit more mature. |
|
75:44 | . And you made some discovery of sort of feature office seismic. What |
|
75:51 | the questions you should ask before you how to develop this structure. All |
|
75:56 | . So here's an example. This a field called Kashagan field. And |
|
76:01 | organs turned out to be a giant field. It was discovered back in |
|
76:06 | late 1990s in the Caspian sea Right? And in Kazakhstan. And |
|
76:14 | are some other giant oilfields already established . The most famous is probably uh |
|
76:19 | G's. Right, chevron field. so here's here's the outline of Cash |
|
76:26 | from the seismic data Sort of looks some weird animal with two big |
|
76:32 | All right. But the scale here pretty impressive. Right? In |
|
76:39 | here's a diagram that that shows you the outline of the a little bit |
|
76:46 | recent paper. This is actually one the first paper, there hasn't been |
|
76:50 | published on this field. All This is a paper that came about |
|
76:54 | years after the initial discovery, talked little bit about the dia genesis of |
|
76:58 | they encountered. Right? But you see the reserve your I mean, |
|
77:02 | reservoir age. You can see how it is. Right? You can |
|
77:07 | what the thickness is. You can what the scale more geometry is. |
|
77:12 | . So, what are some of questions you should ask yourself before you |
|
77:17 | . Where are you going to drill first wells. All right. And |
|
77:20 | can see where they've drilled the first , they drilled it uh in a |
|
77:24 | higher position. right? Because that's everybody does because they think oil is |
|
77:29 | to migrate all the way up to structural highest point. All right. |
|
77:33 | these are some of the questions, ? You want to know what the |
|
77:36 | . Right. So we spend a , a lot of time talking about |
|
77:39 | controlling the players, right? That up the face is right? And |
|
77:45 | their original mineralogy is. So where we carboniferous? Is this sort of |
|
77:53 | uh pennsylvania Mississippi and in pennsylvania aged . So, you have to go |
|
77:59 | to those diagrams I showed you before show you who the players were during |
|
78:03 | Mississippi and in pennsylvania. Right. what didn't we have in the Mississippi |
|
78:08 | in pennsylvania, did we have platform reefs in the Mississippi in Yes or |
|
78:20 | . Mhm. Anybody remember we had lot of ramp like carbonates, |
|
78:26 | Because we didn't have any organisms capable building steve margin platforms. Right? |
|
78:32 | there's a mass extinction at the end the devonian that kills off all those |
|
78:35 | atop words that made lots of platform reefs. Okay. That's how important |
|
78:41 | ages just pay attention the age. , you know who the players |
|
78:45 | Right. So then what's the other I want to ask. Right. |
|
78:49 | the orientation? Where am I paley . Right? So, you want |
|
78:55 | know that you get that from the maps that we've shared with you. |
|
78:59 | ? You want to know if your subtropical or temperate if your tropical or |
|
79:05 | ? How close to the equator, that determines the strength of the |
|
79:08 | Right. And then that helps answer question when words versus lee work. |
|
79:14 | ? But this could also be leeward here. Right, right. Here |
|
79:18 | be a leeward margin. Right? would be a leeward margin. So |
|
79:22 | not just out here on the Our way back here on the |
|
79:25 | all of this is probably leeward with to the prevailing easterly trade winds. |
|
79:31 | ? So it gets you to start about the processes and the influence on |
|
79:36 | deposition that we talked about. All right. Are you in a |
|
79:42 | integrate tonic basin? Are you in more open notion setting? Right. |
|
79:46 | has an influence on some of the that would have driven carbonate deposition. |
|
79:52 | again, what side of the platform ? Open ocean with side face, |
|
79:56 | leeward side. What's the underlying I hope now you've appreciated my comments |
|
80:02 | structuring right to create paleo topography to hydrocarbon, but I think perhaps even |
|
80:10 | important is to drive the reservoir potential quality for some of these carbonates. |
|
80:18 | , How deep is the surrounding All setting? Right. What was |
|
80:21 | water depth here? How deep were um for this given time period? |
|
80:28 | would have been the major skeletal grains have been the non skeletal grains? |
|
80:32 | , well not scalar grains are almost . What who would P Lloyd's |
|
80:38 | They're ubiquitous all through geological time. . I don't know if a geological |
|
80:43 | period where you wouldn't find somewhere in woods or P Lloyd's. Right. |
|
80:48 | the scale of stuff is more problematical the reasons we just said, |
|
80:52 | Mississippi and lower pennsylvania. No platform , high energy reforming organisms. All |
|
81:00 | . And then is there potentially nearby rock? More source rocks would over |
|
81:06 | the platform top, in other what would provide the top inside seal |
|
81:10 | the structure? Could there be any equivalent of ap rights or deeper seeded |
|
81:15 | that might come into play here. to interact with the carbonates that make |
|
81:20 | this structure or two maybe provide later that come up into the platform to |
|
81:25 | ties. All right. And then , what kind of trapping mechanisms? |
|
81:29 | right. So, how many questions I ask your 123456789, 10, |
|
81:37 | , 12, 13, 14, . And I probably forgot some. |
|
81:43 | , But this is what an expiration be asking when they get thrown into |
|
81:47 | new This is what you should ask you ever get thrown into a new |
|
81:51 | and you don't know anything about. right. You know, because these |
|
81:55 | the kinds of factors that influence the development. Right. And yeah. |
|
82:01 | then I think it's always important, know, we talked a lot about |
|
82:04 | platform, keiko's platforms, relatively small platform compared to the northern Bahamas. |
|
82:11 | I think it's always important to relate scale of platforms or reservoirs to the |
|
82:17 | of things we see in the All right. So obviously you haven't |
|
82:21 | a chance to be in the But you know, I show these |
|
82:25 | on our field trips after we visited different settings to get people to appreciate |
|
82:31 | , what they just looked at, they just voted over for for an |
|
82:35 | . Right? How it translates back a uh huh play or a carbonate |
|
82:42 | . So here's Kashagan flooded at the scale as Tacos platform. Here's fat |
|
82:51 | that I just mentioned for offshore Dubai some of the attributes of fat |
|
82:56 | How many fonte fields could you fit an area like keiko's platform bunch? |
|
83:02 | right. And then Fairway field, definitely talked about fairway field last |
|
83:07 | Right. One of these, a reef complexes up on a drowned carbonate |
|
83:13 | . And then judy Creek, we're to talk about here for our final |
|
83:17 | with respect to developing carbonate reservoirs. right, this is a pancake, |
|
83:22 | mean, I told you there's five six kilometres across like this, just |
|
83:27 | few 100 ft thick, but it over a billion barrels of oil or |
|
83:32 | hold over a billion barrels of All right. And then Katie field |
|
83:37 | is like, Gwar, but not big. Not as long, but |
|
83:41 | produces principally from Hewlett grain stones in arab d and look at the scale |
|
83:46 | Qatif compared to the ambergris shoal That probably in the last 3-4000 years. |
|
83:52 | right. It goes from one side the platform to the other side and |
|
83:56 | dumping off over here. Okay, , so again, the goal here |
|
84:04 | been to get you to think about of the drivers for carbonate deposition to |
|
84:08 | the different scales of these influences. . So, I use the term |
|
84:14 | graphic setting or, or regional paleo . There's sort of synonymous and in |
|
84:20 | of their application. But the point at a global scale. You want |
|
84:24 | know where your basin set relative to paley equator. So this can guide |
|
84:30 | thinking about the play potential, right of the trade winds, windward versus |
|
84:35 | sides, all of these things we've about. Alright, so again, |
|
84:40 | the wind relationships. All right. then the bottom topography. And that's |
|
84:46 | I tried to lump our discussion of carbonate plays uh back to a position |
|
84:52 | the de positional profile. Right. it more of a state margin kind |
|
84:57 | profile like we talked about for the or is it more of a ramp |
|
85:02 | with a little bump here? The crest and gradually deepening off to the |
|
85:06 | into a relatively shallow were basin. , any questions or comments about any |
|
85:16 | the play types that we've talked So All right, so let's take |
|
85:30 | let's take a little break here. take about a 10 minute break. |
|
85:34 | we'll come back and finish our last . All right. So let me |
|
85:40 | the recording. Mhm Yeah. Mhm. Yeah. Yeah. |
|
88:54 | Yeah. Oh yeah, mm Yeah. Okay. The last formal |
|
96:43 | for this segment is number 18, I've entitled developing existing carbonate reservoirs and |
|
96:51 | study from the Devonian of Western Mhm. So, a lot |
|
96:56 | lot of what we've been talking about respect to the plate types have been |
|
97:01 | to explain the occurrence of distribution of plays. And the thought that you |
|
97:05 | into thinking about what controls their occurrence distribution. Right. How would you |
|
97:14 | some of these different play types based the rock data and things like |
|
97:22 | So, we need to talk about happens after you make a discovery and |
|
97:28 | would be some of the strategies for this? And that was a little |
|
97:33 | of the discussion about casa, right? Where you drill the first |
|
97:37 | of wells, but that's a huge and that's going to take tons of |
|
97:41 | in order to fully understand and develop of our carbonate reservoirs are not the |
|
97:48 | of Kashagan right there, smaller scale . And so what is the |
|
97:53 | what kind of strategy should you think in order to more properly developed the |
|
97:58 | reservoir. Okay, and this gets back to this diagram that I showed |
|
98:03 | uh a couple of weekends ago when start our discussion about carbonate sequences and |
|
98:09 | city and the two different approaches to to strike a graphic faces framework. |
|
98:15 | ? And the one that I stressed the actual is stick approach uh that |
|
98:21 | generated by the two Canadian geologists, Jack Winnie and frank Stokes and they |
|
98:29 | their model from the bottom up using data to see how the carbonate faces |
|
98:35 | and how they get packaged in the all packages. Again, they coined |
|
98:40 | approach of using major minor cycle contacts time. Strategic graffiti and this is |
|
98:46 | they built their strata. Graphic face bottles for these reservoirs. All |
|
98:50 | And this is uh the beauty of approach is that you can subdivide these |
|
99:00 | down to a much thinner strata. interval do you ever could achieve with |
|
99:08 | starting graffiti or or size mixed Alright, so, appreciate what we |
|
99:14 | about a couple of weekends ago about carbonate cyclist, the relationships if you |
|
99:20 | the carbonate cyclist city that helped actually your interpretation of at least Eur gross |
|
99:25 | positional setting. Right. Remember we about the two models in this, |
|
99:32 | the scale of cyclist city variation. , so where are your thickest |
|
99:37 | Always developed high energy platform margins, ramp crist. Because those are competent |
|
99:45 | to generate a lot more vertical thickness time. Those are where you get |
|
99:49 | 10 2030 m thick cycles. And then of course they can pro |
|
99:53 | or not. Pro grade depending on deep the basin is or what sea |
|
99:58 | is doing through time. And then would the smaller scale cycles be? |
|
100:02 | 1-3 meter thick cycles always back in interior. Right? Either ramp, |
|
100:10 | or platform interior, much shallower, protected environments. Small little changes in |
|
100:16 | level have a dramatic effect on that , but they don't have any effect |
|
100:20 | the high energy briefs or grain And of course out in deeper |
|
100:25 | that's where you get no expression of cyclists. The wright. It's all |
|
100:29 | same deep water environment. So you actually use the scale of cyclist city |
|
100:34 | sort of understand your gross de positional . And then if you understand how |
|
100:42 | faces tie back to a position within deposition will cycle. Then you can |
|
100:47 | that and that guide your spatial prediction faces that have reservoir quality in the |
|
100:53 | . And so, I mean, bottom line is you end up with |
|
100:55 | more precise way to predict the distribution reservoir quality and continuity in the |
|
101:01 | Alright, If you can utilize these techniques. All right. So again |
|
101:07 | saying the cycle contacts have time strata significance because we're saying the first phase |
|
101:13 | deepwater deposition is the same over some . How wide an area depends on |
|
101:19 | magnitude of your relative sea level Alright, but again, the beauty |
|
101:24 | this of this approach is you end with regional correlation much better. Better |
|
101:31 | correlation at a smaller scale than you could achieve with bios treaty graffiti of |
|
101:36 | strati graffiti. All right. The line is this is a simple approach |
|
101:40 | allows more accurate reservoirs. Oh, . This is an approach that allows |
|
101:45 | to more precisely uh determine the amount oil and gas in place, |
|
101:53 | Which is important obviously for for Alright. And you're going to see |
|
101:58 | economic benefit of this approach is that always they added more oil and gas |
|
102:04 | the reservoir than they initially thought they . Okay, so, the method |
|
102:13 | , for for building the so called models are doing what we call zoning |
|
102:19 | carbonate reservoir is the first thing you is from the rock data. You |
|
102:24 | to identify the opportunity sequences. All . And once you've done that, |
|
102:29 | break out your faces relationships. And you start looking Mhm. For the |
|
102:35 | contacts right? Where you get that change from a shallower faces to deeper |
|
102:39 | faces. And you always try to the major cycle context first because they |
|
102:45 | through going lateral disposition. And then come back and you you start in |
|
102:52 | more restricted part of the setting. you look for your smaller scale cycles |
|
102:57 | then you try to correlate them as as you can in the C. |
|
102:59 | direction. That's how you set up time strategic graffiti. And then you |
|
103:04 | the faces within the cycles and then superimpose your reservoir quality. You're porosity |
|
103:10 | permeability, your water saturation data, , whatever whatever other engineering data you |
|
103:16 | . That's how you try to then accurately mapped at those relationships across your |
|
103:24 | discovered reservoir. Okay, so this what we're looking for in the rock |
|
103:29 | . We're looking for a situation where do what what do we call |
|
103:37 | What do the faces do through time upward. Right. So you're looking |
|
103:42 | a relationship where the face is gradually up. Right? And normally the |
|
103:46 | contacts congregational because you don't do this . You do this in a gradual |
|
103:51 | . And then you look for a change in the deposition als setting where |
|
103:57 | go from shallow high energy, too deeper water setting. Well, put |
|
104:02 | basin on top of a reef margin definition. That's a major cycle |
|
104:06 | All right. This is also where get those regional extensive hard grounds developed |
|
104:10 | that position there. Okay, so how you build, try to build |
|
104:17 | time strata graphic framework. Okay, let's do a little exercise here. |
|
104:24 | and we can play this game of to correlate from well to well, |
|
104:29 | , we've got these four wells and yellow intervals are the areas of better |
|
104:35 | quality. So, the question is you would tie this from well to |
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104:39 | , right? And asserted, depends your background. Are you a geologist |
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104:44 | you geophysicist or are you a reservoir ? Right. So, uh the |
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104:52 | , but one is very conservative would afraid to tire From 11 Well Board |
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104:57 | the other. He would just map bunch of blobs like you see |
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105:00 | Right? And then what would a geologist who, Well, he might |
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105:04 | a little bit more bold and try tie these things together like you see |
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105:08 | . Right? And then a optimistic would start to correlate from well to |
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105:13 | like you see there. Yeah. a very optimistic geologist might do something |
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105:18 | looks like that. And then an optimistic geologist. Alright. See how |
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105:26 | level of optimism is driving their correlation well to well. And then let's |
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105:32 | in the geophysicist. Okay. And let's don't forget about the engineer. |
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105:43 | , I couldn't put this in your sets or would have no impact. |
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105:46 | right. If you ever want these sets, I'll be glad to send |
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105:50 | to you. But uh this given me by an engineer that worked for |
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105:55 | . Exxon. Very conservative company But uh even the engineers have a |
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106:02 | of humor. So, yeah. right. So let's get back to |
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106:09 | , reality is when people discover a reservoir, right? It's either going |
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106:15 | be looked at as a inverted right? The structural closure and everybody |
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106:21 | at as being filled the spill right? Where you get ideally you |
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106:26 | get a gas leg at the top then an oil leg and then water |
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106:30 | that. And what's the, what's common approach for developing this? Everybody |
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106:35 | drill the structurally highest point. They their well in and they would put |
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106:40 | would they would tap into the upper oil leg and assume that they're going |
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106:47 | drain out all the oil from that structure. Okay, now we're gonna |
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106:53 | about judy creek here in a judy creek is was clearly early |
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106:58 | recognized to be an atoll reef All right. And everybody thought the |
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107:03 | continuity all the way around. That be the blue in this cartoon |
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107:08 | And then what was between the reefs the margin? A type a critic |
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107:13 | environment with no reservoir quality, no potential. All right, So this |
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107:19 | the, the so called bucket Everybody just assumed that the reefs were |
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107:25 | continuity. And so what do companies S. O. Do back in |
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107:31 | The 60s and 70s, they started in down jip water injectors. Remember |
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107:35 | ? You're going to see this thing tilted up like this to the |
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107:39 | So they would put in a down water injector here. And they thought |
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107:43 | would sweep the whole structure. They they would sweep all of this blue |
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107:48 | they ended up only sweeping a little of it at the base because they |
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107:51 | understand the reef is made up of positional cycles that are separated by vertical |
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107:58 | barriers. Those are the major cycle that we've talked about. All |
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108:03 | so this is the methodology. You read this for yourselves because I'm going |
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108:09 | take you through and basically show you they do this. But basically you |
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108:15 | uh rock data and you need really start off at least some core. |
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108:20 | you best understand your faces relationships in contacts that you need to see in |
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108:25 | to understand whether they're traditional faces contacts cycle contacts like we defined them. |
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108:31 | you start with whatever rock data you get a hold of you interpret for |
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108:35 | and die genesis. Then you relate relationships to log suites so you can |
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108:40 | to take it to another nearby well you might not have as much rock |
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108:45 | . And then you pick the major contacts first to set up your time |
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108:49 | graffiti over the more regional setting. then you come back in and you |
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108:55 | up the minor cycle contacts. And he always started the more restricted |
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108:59 | of the setting because that's where you the best expression of fine scale cyclist |
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109:05 | . And then you try to carry correlate those small scale cycles as far |
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109:10 | you can in a C. Word until you lose confidence in where they |
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109:14 | . Right? Because I think I those high energy platform margin reefer grain |
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109:19 | cycles, The 10 or 20 or m sick are going to be a |
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109:23 | equivalent to a bunch of smaller thinner that are stacked in a platform interior |
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109:30 | . All right. So that's how that's how you build your reservoir faces |
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109:36 | . And so the obvious advantages of simple approach are you end up, |
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109:41 | I said with more accurate reserve You end up with a more sophisticated |
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109:46 | recovery model. All right. So water floods not gonna bust or your |
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109:51 | two sweet which is the Comes after . Right? They try to sweep |
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109:56 | co two that's not going to Right. So the bottom line is |
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110:01 | end up with more complete and efficient development. I'm going to share what |
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110:05 | terms mean here in a minute with of the cross sections. But uh |
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110:09 | can extend the limits of the That's what Canadians called field extensions. |
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110:14 | can create what are called wedge edges you can extend some of the faces |
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110:18 | within a cycle of sedimentation. Of , you can infill drill, |
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110:24 | You may have bypassed some of the , you can go back in and |
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110:28 | drill and you can also deepen some the world's because what's the, I |
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110:33 | you this for the keg river. ? Remember that keg river structure at |
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110:36 | to 28 m. They only drilled the upper cycle, right? Upper |
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110:42 | cycle. And that's what they produced 25 years until it dropped off. |
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110:47 | then they didn't realize their underlying cycles virgin oil that they accessed and they |
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110:52 | production back up. So that's the deepening part of the story and then |
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110:57 | successful reactivation is a Canadian term for completions. When you're trying to come |
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111:04 | and re complete uh or stimulate some these wells after they've been producing for |
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111:10 | while again. How you inject that to to do that. You do |
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111:16 | better job if you understand the internal basically. All right, okay, |
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111:24 | we're going to talk about one of mega sequences here in Western Canada. |
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111:28 | called the Beaver Hill Lake group. just this part of the diagram. |
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111:32 | here it sits on top of the river. We just talked about last |
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111:38 | And then I mentioned the other three sequences of carbonate deposition. Alright, |
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111:44 | here's the map. I think I showed you this when we're talking about |
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111:48 | platform mound carbonate type of play. . And I said we'd come back |
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111:54 | talk about judy Creek in more So what is the regional setting, |
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111:59 | , you're in the western Canadian sedimentary . That's one of these big |
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112:03 | intricate tonic basins. Right? It up to the open ocean to the |
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112:09 | the north in the arctic. But you have these smaller scale carbonate platforms |
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112:19 | front the deeper water. But not is not the deep open ocean. |
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112:24 | . This is because this is part an isolated integrate tonic basin. So |
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112:30 | pink represents a carbonate platform, shallow . Yeah, during earlier stages of |
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112:37 | , there's actually platform margin Reese on side of the platform over here there |
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112:41 | producing fields called Deer mountain and house that produce on this side. And |
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112:47 | are they there? Because your trade are from east to west. |
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112:52 | So that's the one we're facing side then they get drowned out relatively rapid |
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112:57 | in sea level terminates that reef deposition the margin. And what do you |
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113:02 | ? You do? What we call stepping. Right, you shift your |
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113:06 | of high energy from the margin on subtle paleo topographic highs. And you |
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113:12 | these more isolated reef structures. And obviously judy creek is the most |
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113:20 | of these types because it is the that was extensively developed with with numerous |
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113:28 | and cord scoring cord wells. But every one of these blue blobs |
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113:34 | a producing atoll reef complex. All . And this is the old cross |
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113:40 | view and the true scale judy Creek discovered in around 1959 or so off |
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113:48 | that vintage aid. Seismic. It barely visible as a subtle seismic |
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113:54 | So it looks like a pancake because what it is. Right. It's |
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113:58 | or 6 km across this way or , Actually more. Right. It's |
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114:03 | like 10 or 12 km across, on what part you cut. But |
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114:08 | look at the vertical scale here. only a few 100 ft thick. |
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114:13 | , so great aerial extent, not lot of vertical thickness. You have |
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114:17 | appreciate that. Later with the loading the Canadian rockies off to the |
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114:23 | You did what he started to tilt this up to the northeast. |
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114:28 | So that's why you see the original water contact. Yeah, testing |
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129:17 | It's working. Okay. So, had an issue with the microphone. |
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129:28 | , you have to rely on on word slides that I showed you write |
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129:33 | summer of some of the advantages and approaches designing the carbonate reservoir. And |
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129:39 | think you can piece together the deposition from what I said. Right? |
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129:44 | , just to finish up this let me share with you the the |
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129:53 | this reservoir is put together and you put this, you can put this |
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129:58 | by from the well controlled and first all appreciate the tremendous amount of well |
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130:04 | associated with this small little pancake structure . O. Resources. And then |
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130:12 | other companies that bought judy Creek from S. O. There's been over |
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130:17 | wells drilled into this into this Right? And you can see summer |
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130:23 | oil producers summer water injectors, Some have been abandoned summer dry |
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130:29 | But they tried to use the well to further their understanding of the |
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130:35 | Right. And so what has been out now essentially These 1, |
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130:43 | 345 cycles of sedimentation. Right? oldest and black is R0 to R |
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130:49 | . So look at the black This defines the outer boundary of this |
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130:53 | reservoir during the first cycle of And then R 1 to R |
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130:59 | R 2, two or 3 or or 4. And what do you |
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131:03 | here are 4-5. Okay, Are . Is the capping storm. What |
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131:08 | Sancho on the Sancho that I said the whole reef complex. Right. |
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131:15 | I think you can start to see things vary in terms of their |
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131:20 | Right? Look at look on the side here. Well, what side |
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131:24 | this? Just anybody remember the wind in the Devonian? I think we |
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131:31 | it for a couple of different reservoirs of the out of the northeast. |
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131:36 | , so that makes this side That makes this side leeward the evidence |
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131:42 | this is they ice a pact. sand bodies. The Sturm atop Rhode |
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131:46 | bodies and the upper caffeine cycle. see how they line up again parallel |
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131:52 | the preferred trade winds? Subtitle sand are never the Caicos model. They |
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131:58 | up parallel to the strong easterly trade . So that's the evidence that winds |
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132:02 | out of the northeast. So what you see here with judy creek? |
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132:08 | terms of the so called stacking We had this little discussion last time |
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132:14 | How Exxon uses stacking geometries to 1st level. Well, what is the |
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132:20 | geometry back here? This is what would call aggregation. All stacking |
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132:24 | Right? Basically each margin is of in the same position. That's actually |
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132:30 | , very typical for most carbonate buildups this type. All right. They |
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132:37 | are aggregation all on the leeward It's actually true for bigger scale platforms |
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132:42 | well. Okay, and then why you get all these black producers off |
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132:48 | structure? Anybody want to guess the of what's being produced here should great |
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132:57 | . Yeah, it's that colloidal grain again, because that's the breakdown product |
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133:01 | stream atop roids. Mm Sleep I'm going to show you two cross |
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133:07 | here. So we can, we compare. So, I'll get there |
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133:11 | just a second. I just want to appreciate the leeward side. Remember |
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133:15 | was the difference generally between the windward and the leeward sides of of these |
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133:21 | or smaller reef complexes with respect to development? Where always is the best |
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133:26 | development? Right on the windward Right. And then what was the |
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133:32 | of reef deposition back here? Very . Right. I showed you the |
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133:38 | and logs from police and great barrier . Very patchy. And what else |
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133:43 | back here in a strong trade winds ? You shoot sand through those little |
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133:48 | between the reefs or you stress the and kill them. All right. |
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133:53 | you can shed the stuff off the side and that's the origin of that |
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133:56 | trend right there. These are political stones. All right. So let |
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134:01 | compare the northeast side here to the the southeast side here. So you |
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134:06 | see the scale here. We're going about five km around the bend |
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134:11 | And I think you can see already from the way these margin stack that |
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134:17 | a difference from one side to the . All right, So here's the |
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134:21 | northeast facing side. This is the the the heart of the strong north |
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134:26 | trade wind Effect. And you can the first cycle R0 R one is |
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134:34 | it shows up right to reef margin re flat it pro grade a little |
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134:39 | because you see Laguna carbonate sitting on of that reef flat which is sitting |
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134:44 | top of the reef margin. All . And the refilled out basically to |
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134:50 | position right here. Okay, now at look at the next cycle, |
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134:54 | go up and we have reef margin re flat behind it. Alright, |
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135:00 | stacking in the same position and then little bit of a shift back |
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135:04 | That's what they called retreating style of stacking geometry and then a little |
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135:11 | more of a back step effect. back in here. All right. |
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135:15 | here they just mapped what they mapped flat material for that cycle of |
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135:21 | And what you don't see is the Street photographer essential on top of |
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135:26 | But look, if there's a re right here, they picked up a |
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135:28 | flat in this well and they didn't it in this. Well, what |
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135:32 | to be in between? What faces to be in between? Where does |
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135:40 | reflect come from? Yeah. So got to be in between this? |
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135:47 | and right here somewhere there's got to a reef margin. All right. |
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135:52 | they realized that and they stepped out right. And that's what they |
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135:56 | Uh They're their wedge prospect there. out prospect. That's how they added |
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136:01 | oil to the reserves. Okay, see this in a minute. |
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136:06 | what's this? What's the sense you here? It's mostly up building with |
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136:09 | little bit of shifting back at the , but basically everything is stacking in |
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136:14 | . Right, Remember the Exxon boys call this? What part of the |
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136:19 | level curve trump? Which is what of the sea level curve. What's |
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136:24 | stat, What's there? Systems track part of the high stand? Late |
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136:36 | falling pro gravitational. So if it's late, it is early. |
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136:44 | so the early early thai stand after . After you see levels rapidly risen |
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136:53 | to them. Right? And it's . Really high stand is characterized by |
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136:57 | they would say. Catch up, , catch up. That makes you |
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137:01 | aggregation all and then when you start pro great after that, they call |
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137:05 | the late high stand. All All right, So let's go around |
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137:09 | corner down here. Here's the same of Reef deposition at the first cycle |
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137:16 | our Zurita are one builds right out this position here. And I think |
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137:20 | clearly you can see back stepping back back, stepping back stepping. There's |
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137:24 | term atop Rhode Sancho now, in cross sectional view again, you see |
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137:29 | missing their picking up re flat in wells here so there there's potential to |
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137:34 | out and drill new oil, which what they did. But again, |
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137:38 | overall pattern is back stepping right, they would relate to the early to |
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137:43 | high stand systems track. Right? here they would say syllables rapidly |
|
137:50 | right, an overall sense down But uh oh wait a minute. |
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137:54 | level wasn't doing that over here. would already stabilized or catching up. |
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137:59 | the folly of trying to use stacking , Sea level is not going to |
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138:04 | from one side of this, of complex to the other side over five |
|
138:08 | . There's no way. All right orientation with respect to the trade |
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138:13 | its and other environmental factors that have come into play besides sea level |
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138:18 | All right. Yes, sea level creates the space for each of these |
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138:23 | . It terminates the reef creates new . But how you fill it up |
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138:29 | again on your all the local environmental , some of which could be related |
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138:34 | facing into the trade winds or away the trade winds. Put other environmental |
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138:39 | like we talked about for reef deposition . Okay, and here's what I |
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138:46 | talking about how they, how they more reserves to the to judy |
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138:51 | Right? Like I said, they've drilled here, they drilled a couple |
|
138:56 | of sedimentation, one has the re in it. Then they see uh |
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139:02 | two cycles of sedimentation dominated by laguna . Well, if they encounter low |
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139:08 | carbonate here, what has to be in front? High energy margin. |
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139:12 | ? Re flat or brief margin. that's where they step out and drill |
|
139:16 | and find new oil. Okay, then how did they add oil to |
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139:21 | inner part of the trend here? realize that the small scale cycles sometimes |
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139:27 | up to beat your title flat that ferocity and that stuff is charged and |
|
139:32 | could produce that but they'd have to back in and deepen the wells and |
|
139:35 | perforate the individual poorest faces. But they did that and that's how |
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139:41 | added more oil and gas, mostly to the To the reserves. |
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139:47 | That's how they went from 830 million 1.1 billion barrels of oil in |
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139:52 | All right. And then just so know, another pool on, on |
|
139:58 | drowned swan hills platform is called Snipe . I showed you schematic cartoon. |
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140:03 | think when we talked about sequences and city basically judy creek has the same |
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140:11 | reef dominated cycles and then there's a capping strum atop essential on top. |
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140:16 | believe the reason why I'm mentioning this if you're more interested in the engineering |
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140:21 | and how it ties back to the city. I put a paper on |
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140:28 | . It was published by Spring Gate others at esso right cord Spring Gate |
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140:36 | engineer that works night blake and I you'll see in mirror's name on |
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140:40 | He works night blake before we got on the judy on the Cape River |
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140:47 | . Okay. All right. Any or comments. Okay. I've got |
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141:02 | couple of cross sections here. Let's if I can yes. Okay, |
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141:08 | these out to you and we can from him. Angela. I'm going |
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141:16 | stop the recording right now. I think Angela's she's at the doctor's office |
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141:21 | now, but she still got her on. But I'm going to, |
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141:25 | going to pause the recording. Yeah, assertions. Yeah, |
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141:44 | Yeah. Take, wow. Press section first. Yeah. 1st |
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142:06 | is the |
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