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By Louis J. Mazzullo1
Search and Discovery Article #40045 (2002)
*Adapted for online presentation from an article by the same author in AAPG Explorer (September, 1998), entitled “Past Data Goes Back to the Future.” Appreciation is expressed to the author and to M. Ray Thomasson, former Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical Integration Committee, and Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1Petroleum
geological consultant and general partner with Ameristate
Exploration
of
Albuquerque, N.M., and Midland, Texas ([email protected]).
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General Statement
The
In mature basins such as the Permian Basin of
southeastern New Mexico, there is a wealth of geologic information
available in the form of well logs, 2-D Upper Pennsylvanian Carbonates in Southeastern New MexicoProductive areasFigure 1 shows that in southeastern New Mexico there are a number of sub-parallel trends of established gas and oil production from carbonate algal mound facies in the Cisco and Canyon Formations. Production in the region occurs where several algal mound complexes coalesce or are closely laterally offset to one another. To date, only a handful of multi-well Cisco-Canyon fields have been discovered in this area, the most significant being the Indian Basin and Dagger Draw fields. Because of the way in which the Cisco-Canyon mound trend developed in this region, there should be more opportunities for production from these rocks, albeit from smaller features. This Cisco-Canyon sequence was deposited as individual algal mound and related carbonate units over a wide area of the present-day Permian Basin. Detailed paleontological age dating of the upper Pennsylvanian in Texas has defined over 20 separate time units that were deposited in response to changes in relative sea level. Since the entire Permian Basin area was affected by these changes, there should be as many discrete depositional units present in the play area. During the Late Pennsylvanian, the sea floor across most of southeastern New Mexico had a gentle slope. Slight changes in sea level and hence optimal environmental deposition caused algal mound deposition to shift laterally by several miles in an updip or downdip direction. Such shifts in depositional focus occurred over a width of more than 20 miles across parts of the area, resulting in the field pattern of Figure 1. Figure 2 is a schematic cross-section that shows how several different depositional units may develop within a relatively narrow fairway--in this case, perhaps no more than two miles wide. The shifts in depositional sites of the various algal mound-related facies occurred as a result of changes in relative sea level. The algal mounds are commonly found at the shelf margin and are composed of phylloid and red algae, and associated bryozoans and encrusting forams. They grade basinward to foreshelf carbonates and shales, and shelfward to shallow marine and supratidal carbonates and clastics. Indian Basin Field is constructed by many of these individual depositional units stacking vertically because of recurrent movement on faults. This type of buildup is not expected in other, more stable areas of southeastern New Mexico. Instead, one might expect to find:
Single unit buildups produce economically from
depths less than 7,000 feet, and searching for these smaller reservoirs
can make economic sense. This is where a thorough understanding of
subsurface geology integrated with 2-D Potentially Prospective AreasOutside of the existing fields in southeastern New Mexico, the Cisco-Canyon has received less attention than zones such as the Morrow sandstones and Bone Spring sandstones and carbonates. Cuttings from existing wells in some of the less densely drilled areas of the basin can be used to identify depositional environments. The algal mound facies of the Cisco-Canyon are diagnostic, and so are the facies that are found immediately behind (shelfward) and in front of (basinward) the mounds. In any particular time unit, the shelf-margin algal mound trend will be fairly narrow (often less than a mile wide).
If enough sample control is available, it is
often possible to bracket individual mound fairways by identifying the
foreslope and back-mound facies. To identify these fairways, an isopach
map of the portion of the Cisco-Canyon section of interest was
constructed (Figure 3). This map shows a significant increase in
thickness in proximity to the algal mound buildups. Samples were
evaluated to determine gross depositional facies. Figure 3 also shows
three distinct Cisco-Canyon time units identified in samples, leading to
a tentative identification of their respective algal mound fairways. To
further narrow down the fairways, several 2-D
Figures 4 and 5 show high quality 2-D lines
across part of this trend. They both clearly identify the shelf margin
and offlap beds associated with the fairways as determined from samples.
Figure 3 shows the type of prospect that can be generated from
coordinated subsurface mapping and commercially available 2-D
In this case, a lease acquisition program was
recommended that encompassed only that acreage identified by the initial
geologic mapping. The map shows that each individual algal mound trend
will be discontinuous, and comprised of “pearls on a string.” A regional
Concluding Remarks
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