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Graphic Logging For Interpreting Process-Generated Stratigraphic Sequences and Aquifer/Reservoir Potential: With Analog Shelf To Shoreface Examples From the Atlantic Coastal Plain Province, U.S.A

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TLDR
In this article, a process-based method of graphic logging and stratigraphic interpretation that is based on a new, texturally based classification of clastic sediment which is independent from composition, cementation, and geologic environment is presented.
Abstract
This paper demonstrates a process-based method of graphic logging and stratigraphic interpretation that is based on a new, texturally based classification of clastic sediment which is independent from composition, cementation, and geologic environment. The method integrates facies analysis with sequence stratigraphy because it requires identifying surfaces, compiling vertical changes in texture and attributes between surfaces, and uses these parameters to identify facies units and interpret continuously deposited intervals. Four clastic shelf to shoreface successions from the Atlantic Coastal Plain Province (Cretaceous to Holocene in age) with established chronostratigraphic and sequence stratigraphic frameworks provide examples of the application of this method. For each, graphic logs standardized for texture show the facies and bounding surfaces that define the thickness and hierarchy of event strata (e.g., sequences, beds, bedsets, parasequences, parasequence sets); these are directly compared with gamma-ray log response patterns and the distribution of factors that impact potential permeability. Shelf to shoreface successions were chosen because these facies exhibit the greatest diversity in composition (siliciclastic, carbonate, and glauco-phosphatics), but, in spite of this, exhibit comparable and predictable graphic and gamma-ray response patterns if systematically logged using this method. For the process–response model examined, texture, i.e., principal grain size, controls the amplitude (width) of the graphic log; its shape is constant, and independent from composition. The pattern in the correlated gamma-ray log parallels the log of principal grain size, except that an inverse response is associated with coarser lags; the amplitude of the gamma log is controlled by composition. A proxy for permeability developed from standardized textural fields is applied to two of the examples, to shows how aquifer or reservoir potential is systematically tied to stratigraphic and sedimentologic parameters.

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Citations
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Modeling the Depositional Environment of the Sandstone Reservoir in the Middle Miocene Sidri Member, Badri Field, Gulf of Suez Basin, Egypt: Integration of Gamma-Ray Log Patterns and Petrographic Characteristics of Lithology

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the gamma-ray (GR) log patterns of the studied reservoir wells to understand the depositional setting of a hydrocarbon reservoir that lacks core samples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for natural molecular hydrogen seepage associated with Carolina bays (surficial, ovoid depressions on the Atlantic Coastal Plain, Province of the USA)

TL;DR: A study of soil gases was made in North Carolina (USA) in and around morphological depressions called “Carolina bays.” This type of depression is observed over the Atlantic coastal plains of the USA, but their origin remains debated as mentioned in this paper.
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Late Holocene Evolution of Currituck Sound, North Carolina, USA: Environmental Change Driven by Sea-Level Rise, Storms, and Barrier Island Morphology

TL;DR: Moran et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the Holocene evolution of Currituck Sound, North Carolina, using geological data and a hydrodynamic model to understand how this depositional basin changed in response to sea-level rise and regional climate patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of alkaline diagenesis on sandstone reservoir quality: Insights from the Lower Cretaceous Erlian Basin, China:

TL;DR: The Tengger Formation in the Baiyinchagan sag of the Erlian Basin has behaved as a low-permeability petroleum system during its diagenetic history.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Scale of Grade and Class Terms for Clastic Sediments

TL;DR: In this paper, the problem of terminology in geology has been discussed and the need for greater uniformity of usage and hence much confusion has arisen due to the indiscriminate use of the terms both in the old and new senses.

Classification of Carbonate Rocks According to Depositional Textures

TL;DR: In this paper, three textural features seem especially useful in classifying those carbonate rocks that retain their depositional texture: presence or absence of carbonate mud, which differentiates muddy carbonate from grainstone; abundance of grains, which allows muddy carbonates to be subdivided into mudstone, wackstone, and packstone; and presence of signs of binding during deposition, which characterizes boundstone.

Siliciclastic sequence stratigraphy in well logs, cores, and outcrops

TL;DR: In this paper, the stratal expressions of parasequences, especially as components of systems tracts, and sequences in well logs, cores, and outcrops are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Architectural-Element Analysis: A New Method of Facies Analysis Applied to Fluvial Deposits

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new method of analysis for fluvial facies, which subdivides fluvic deposits into local suites consisting of one or more of a set of eight basic three-dimensional architectural elements.
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