--> ABSTRACT: Spatial Prediction of Caves in San Andres Dolomite, Yates Field, West Texas, by Eugene A. Nosal, Janine L. Carlson, and Dexter H. Craig; #91030 (2010)

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Spatial Prediction of Caves in San Andres Dolomite, Yates Field, West Texas

Eugene A. Nosal, Janine L. Carlson, Dexter H. Craig

Persistent speculation that caves played a key role in the high flow rates of many early wells in the Yates field (203 wells potentialed for more than 10,000 BOPD each, 26 wells for more than 80,000 BOPD each) has raised questions of why the caves exist, how many there are, and how to incorporate them into reservoir management practice. This paper describes the use of probability theory to answer these questions.

Among the geologic factors that contributed to the remarkable early productivity of Yates are zones of karst in the upper San Andres Dolomite, the principal reservoir unit. Hundreds of infill wells drilled after unitization of the field in 1976 have provided ample data on cave numbers and patterns. These data indicate that karstification was produced by dynamic lenses of fresh water beneath a cluster of islands formed when lowering of Late Permian sea level exposed San Andres limestone to rainfall and dissolution.

The seemingly random occurrences of caves can be fitted into a geologic framework of systematic karst processes to produce mappable petrophysical parameters. The most important of these predicts, in probabilistic terms, where the caves are located. The contribution of cave porosity to total reservoir porosity can also be estimated. This cave component of porosity can be displayed as a petrophysical log and manipulated in the same way as matrix porosity.

The tie between probability and cave concentration provides additional insight into the geologic history of the San Andres islands as well. Diagrams of cave probability make it possible to identify at least two stillstands of island sea level, and zones of vadose caves associated with the stillstand of most intense karstification.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91030©1988 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, 20-23 March 1988.