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Institution

Cairn Energy

About: Cairn Energy is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Field (physics) & Hydraulic fracturing. The organization has 84 authors who have published 72 publications receiving 1347 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Divyang Shah1
TL;DR: Definitions of HWE explained with historical background are explained; factors affecting it are discussed; and methods to minimize problems associated with it are suggested.
Abstract: The Healthy Worker Effect (HWE) phenomenon has been under debate since some years. Some epidemiologists regard HWE as an ordinary method problem while others consider it a field of science by itself. This article gives definitions of HWE explained with historical background; discusses factors affecting it and suggests methods to minimize problems associated with it.

268 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the first major input of sands into the basin, in the > 1 km thick deltaic Barail Formation, occurred at 38 Ma, providing a well dated accessible sediment record 17 Myr older than the previously described 21 Ma sediments.

167 citations

Book
Rob Simm1, Mike Bacon
16 Jun 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a complete framework for seismic amplitude interpretation and analysis in a practical manner that allows easy application independent of any commercial software products, and guide the interpreter through each step, introducing techniques with practical observations.
Abstract: Seismic amplitudes yield key information on lithology and fluid fill, enabling interpretation of reservoir quality and likelihood of hydrocarbon presence. The modern seismic interpreter must be able to deploy a range of sophisticated geophysical techniques, such as seismic inversion, AVO (amplitude variation with offset), and rock physics modelling, as well as integrating information from other geophysical techniques and well data. This accessible, authoritative book provides a complete framework for seismic amplitude interpretation and analysis in a practical manner that allows easy application - independent of any commercial software products. Deriving from the authors' extensive industry expertise and experience of delivering practical courses on the subject, it guides the interpreter through each step, introducing techniques with practical observations and helping to evaluate interpretation confidence. Seismic Amplitude is an invaluable day-to-day tool for graduate students and industry professionals in geology, geophysics, petrophysics, reservoir engineering, and all subsurface disciplines making regular use of seismic data.

145 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the tectonic evolution of the southeastern margin of the Red Sea Rift in western Yemen using a multi-disciplinary field study of an east-west transect between Al Hudaydah and Sana9a.
Abstract: The tectonic evolution of the southeastern margin of the Red Sea Rift in western Yemen has been investigated using a multi-disciplinary field study of an east-west transect between Al Hudaydah and Sana9a. Slow subsidence of up to 1 km occurred over the area during a 100 m.y. period before rifting. There was a major episode of flood volcanism between ca. 30 and 20 Ma, and important extensional faulting began after the eruption of the volcanic rocks and ceased before middle to late Miocene sediments and volcanic rocks were deposited unconformably on top of rotated fault blocks on the coastal Tihama Plain. Surface uplift has produced the Yemen highlands, whose highest peak reaches an elevation of 3660 m. This is attributed to plume heating and eruption of >3000 m of volcanic rocks. Apatite fission-track ages indicate early to middle Miocene exhumational cooling ages, postdating the major volcanic phase and contemporaneous with rifting. Volcanism was accompanied by emplacement of subvertical dike swarms, which generally strike north-northwest to northwest, broadly parallel to the Red Sea coastline. Major faults indicate northeast-southwest-directed extension. Large granitic sheets and plutons (up to 25 km wide) intruded the volcanic rocks. Approximately 30 km of extension has taken place across a 75-km-wide zone (β = 1.7) in 6-8 m.y. The relative timing of volcanism followed by extension and uplift does not fit conventional models of passive or active rifting. We suggest that the proto-Red Sea Rift was caused by regional plate stresses that exploited lithospheric weakening caused by the Afar plume. Appreciable doming only occurred after the main episode of volcanism, which suggests that magmas extruded before maximum thermal expansion of the lithosphere took place.

136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors determine the timing of surface uplift using the sedimentary record in the adjacent Surma Basin to the south, which records the transition from a passive margin with southward thickening sedimentary packages to a flexural basin with north-thickening strata, due to loading by the uplifting plateau.

95 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20201
20192
20172
20162
20153
20146