--> Wyodak Coal, Tongue River Member of the Fort Union Formation, Powder River Basin, Wyoming: "No-Coal Zones" and Their Effects o
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Wyodak Previous HitCoalNext Hit, Tongue River Member of the Fort Union Formation, Powder River Basin, Wyoming: "No-Previous HitCoalNext Hit Zones" and Their Effects on Coalbed Methane Production

Mark Ashley, Yates Petroleum Corporation, 105 S. 4th, Artesia, NM 88210, phone: 505 748 4310, [email protected]

The Powder River Basin contains more than 80 percent of the state's Previous HitcoalNext Hit resources within the Tongue River Member of the Fort Union Formation (upper Paleocene). The Fort Union Formation is divided from older to younger into the Tullock, Lebo Shale, and Tongue River Members. The coals of the Tongue River Member consist of approximately 32 Previous HitcoalNext Hit seams with a combined thickness in excess of 300 ft. One of the major Previous HitcoalNext Hit seams within the Tongue River Member is the Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit.

The Tongue River Member of the Fort Union Formation was deposited by a fluvial-deltaic system filling Lake Lebo. Extensive peat deposits accumulated within poorly drained interdeltaic and deltaic swamps. There are “no-Previous HitcoalNext Hit zones” within the Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit seam where the Previous HitcoalNext Hit has been replaced by sandstones and shales. The “no-Previous HitcoalNext Hit zones” are distributary fluvial channels that meandered throughout the swamps. Several methods have been developed to predict the locations of the fluvial channels and avoid drilling “no-Previous HitcoalNext Hit zones.” Additionally, the relationship between adjacent Previous HitcoalTop seams may imply a pattern of production.