Caney Shale, Arkoma Basin, Oklahoma
Forgotson, Jamas M.
Oklahoma University, Norman, OK
The Caney Shale, Chesterian age, was deposited in the
Oklahoma part of the Arkoma Basin one of a series of foreland basins
that formed progressively westward along the Ouachita Fold Belt
from the Black Warrior Basin in Mississippi to basins in southwest
Texas. The Arkoma Basin in Oklahoma is in the Southeast corner of
the state north and northwest of the Ouachita Mountains. The Caney
thickens toward the southeast from 90' at its northwest edge to 220'
along the Choctaw fault in the south. It can be subdivided into 6
intervals based on characteristics of the GR, density and resistivity
logs. The Caney dips southward from a depth of 3000' in northern
McIntosh County, Oklahoma to 12,000' just north of the Choctaw
thrust. Reported average TOC values for the Caney Formation range
from 5% to 8%. The TOC values range from 3% to 8% for different
members of the Caney. The R0 values range from 1.7 at the northwest
edge of the gas window
to 3.4 just north of the Choctaw thrust. TOC
values show linear
correlation
with density. Mud log gas shows have
a strong
correlation
with desorbed gas values that range from 120 to
150 SCF/T. Estimates of GIP for the Caney range from 30 to 40 BCF/
section. Only one Caney completion reported an IP over 1000 Mcf/d.
Other vertical completions have ranged from 50 to 100 Mcf/d. The
Williams Layman 1-27 horizontal completion declined from an IP of
822 Mcf/d to 180 Mcf/d in one year and could produce at 80-100
Mcf/d for an extended period.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90071 © 2007 AAPG Rocky Mountain Meeting, Snowbird, Utah