Click to view poster in PDF format.
PSDigital Oil-Play
Maps
of the Permian Basin*
Caroline L. Breton1, Shirley P. Dutton1, and Ronald F. Broadhead2
Search and Discovery Article #40333 (2008)
Posted October 30, 2008
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas, April 20-23, 2008.
1 Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX ([email protected], [email protected])
2
New
Mexico
Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, New
Mexico
Tech, Socorro, NM ([email protected])
The Permian Basin of west Texas and southeast New
Mexico
, which produced >30 Bbbl of oil through 2000, remains an important oil-producing province. Because of the substantial amount of oil remaining in the basin, a digital oil-play portfolio was developed. A total of 1,339 significant-sized reservoirs in the basin each had cumulative production of >1 MMbbl of oil through 2000; total production from these reservoirs was 28.9 Bbbl. Thirty-two oil plays covering both the Texas and New
Mexico
parts of the Permian Basin were defined on the basis of reservoir stratigraphy, lithology, depositional environment, and structural and tectonic setting. Each significant-sized reservoir was assigned to a play and mapped using the Geographic Information System (GIS).
GIS files illustrate reservoirs, play boundaries, and boundaries of major geologic elements. For Texas reservoirs, wells were buffered by 0.5 mi and reservoir boundaries manually simplified. Although reservoir outlines generated by this process show approximate location, size, and shape of each reservoir, they are not precise boundaries. A reservoir shapefile for each play contains the geographic location of each reservoir and attribute information, including play name, play code, RRC unique reservoir number, RRC district, field name, reservoir name, state, county, discovery year, depth in feet to top of the reservoir, 2000 production in barrels, and cumulative production in barrels through 2000. New
Mexico
oil-pool-boundary (reservoir) and play-boundary GIS shapefiles were provided, rectilinear boundaries of New
Mexico
reservoirs reflecting legal definition of the fields. New
Mexico
and Texas play-boundary data were merged to form a single Permian Basin play-boundary shapefile. A map of five Pennsylvanian plays producing from ramp and platform carbonates and slope and basin sandstones illustrates the play
maps
.
|
|
Data Sources and Acknowledgments
ArcGIS by ESRI was used to create these final data and
The oil play Dutton, S.P., Kim, E.M., Broadhead, R.F., Breton, C.L., Raatz, W.D., Ruppel, S.C., and Kerans, Charles, 2005, Play analysis and digital portfolio of major oil reservoirs in the Permian Basin: The University of Texas at Austin, Bureau of Economic Geology Report of Investigations No. 271, 287 p., CD-ROM.
Dutton, S. P., E.M Kim, R.F. Broadhead, C.L. Breton, W.D. Raatz, S.C. Ruppel, and C. Kerans, 2005, Play analysis and digital portfolio of major oil reservoirs in the Permian Basin: The University of Texas at Austin, Bureau of Economic Geology Report of Investigations No. 271, 287 p., CD-ROM. Frenzel, H.N., R.R. Bloomer, R.B. Cline, J.M. Cys, J.E. Galley, W.R. Gibson, J.M. Hills, W.E. King, W.R. Seager, F.E. Kottlowski, S. Thompson III, G.C. Luff, B.T. Pearson, and D.C. Van Siclen, 1988, The Permian Basin region, in Sedimentary cover; North American Craton, United States: GSA Geology of North America, D. 2, p. 261-306.
Hills, J.M., 1984, Sedimentation, tectonism, and
Silver, B.A., and R.G. Todd, 1969, Permian cyclic strata, northern Midland and Delaware Basins, west Texas and southeastern New
|
