--> ABSTRACT: Gas-Producing Submarine-Fan Channel-Levee Complexes in Forbes Formation, Arbuckle Field, Central Sacramento Basin, California, by Douglas P. Imperato and Tor H. Nilsen; #91030 (2010)
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Gas-Producing Submarine-Fan Channel-Levee Complexes in Forbes Formation, Arbuckle Previous HitFieldNext Hit, Central Sacramento Basin, California

Douglas P. Imperato, Tor H. Nilsen

The Campanian Forbes Formation was deposited as a south-prograding basin-plain, deep-Previous HitseaNext Hit fan and slope turbidite system in the Late Cretaceous Great Valley forearc basin of California. Gas production from the Arbuckle Previous HitfieldNext Hit is from the middle deep-Previous HitseaNext Hit fan deposits of the Forbes Formation at depths of 5,500-7,000 ft. The Previous HitfieldNext Hit is located approximately 7 mi east of the western erosional margin of the Sacramento basin, where the Forbes Formation crops out and dips steeply to the east. The Previous HitfieldNext Hit has a proven acreage of 3,450 and contains 25 producing wells. A Previous HitnorthNext Hit-trending anticline, which is present on the regional easterly dip, provides 150-200 ft of closure in the southern part of the Previous HitfieldNext Hit.

Detailed maps and cross sections of the gas-producing intervals of the Forbes Formation in the Arbuckle Previous HitfieldNext Hit have been constructed from correlation of 77 well logs and detailed examination of the nearby outcrops. Well-log correlations and sedimentary facies identified in outcrop indicate that the gas-producing intervals are chiefly channel-levee complexes in a mud-rich deep-Previous HitseaTop fan system. These channel-level complexes trend southward, are slightly sinuous, and are as much as 1 mi wide.

A comparison of structure-contour maps with net-sandstone maps and gas production data indicates that not all gas production is structurally controlled. Channel-axis sandstone that is as thick as 250 ft generally produces gas only within structural closure, whereas thinner, more shale-rich, channel-margin and levee deposits produce gas from updip stratigraphic pinch-outs into interchannel shale.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91030©1988 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, 20-23 March 1988.