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Previous HitCarbonateNext Hit Previous HitFaciesNext Hit Identification Using Borehole Image Logs: An Example from Fullerton Field, Andrews County, Texas

FULLMER, SHAWN and STEPHEN C. RUPPEL, Bureau of Economic Geology. The Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78713

Borehole image logs are an undervalued and underutilized technology for delineating Previous HitfaciesNext Hit and cyclicity in Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit reservoirs. Most wireline logging devices provide relatively poor resolution of Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit Previous HitfaciesNext Hit and cyclicity – key elements of Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit reservoir architecture and heterogeneity. Microresistivity borehole image logs, by contrast, provide high resolution images of major Previous HitfaciesNext Hit variations encountered in the borehole. Successful use of image logs for Previous HitfaciesNext Hit identification depends upon and must start with the identification of Previous HitfaciesNext Hit and Previous HitfaciesNext Hit stacking patterns in cores. Many Previous HitcarbonateNext Hit Previous HitfaciesNext Hit have distinctive characteristics that allow them to be confidently identified on resistivity image logs. Previous HitFaciesNext Hit stacking patterns observed in cores provide the framework necessary to guide interpretations of cyclicity on image logs. This kind of core-based calibration ensures accurate interpretation of resistivity images and consistency between interpretations made from cores and those made from image logs. In this study, we first identified Previous HitfaciesNext Hit and styles of cyclicity in the Tubb, Lower Clear Fork, and Wichita from cores in Fullerton field. We compared Previous HitfaciesNext Hit in a nearby core with resistivity images on an FMI log to identify six key Previous HitfaciesNext Hit: tidal flat, nodular subtidal, subtidal wackestone/packstone, fusilinid wackestone/packstone, grainstone, and collapse breccia/karst. Cycles were defined on the image log based on stacking patterns observed in core. The resulting log of Previous HitfaciesNext Hit and cycles provides nearly as much information as a core. The utility of evaluating boreholes using this approach is that high resolution data regarding Previous HitfaciesTop and cyclicity can be extrapolated from areas with core control to areas with poor to no core recovery.