1887
Volume 20, Issue 4
  • ISSN: 1354-0793
  • E-ISSN:

Abstract

Core samples from seven wells in Lower Cretaceous limestones of the Upper Shu’aiba Member were characterized by conventional core analyses, petrography, bulk chemistry and mercury-injection capillary pressure data to define reservoir rock types (RRT). In the main oilfield studied, lithofacies are arranged in three main belts corresponding to ramp crest, upper slope and lower slope, with bioclast content and size decreasing down depositional dip. Rock typing is based on the observation of distinct, but overlapping, porosity–permeability transforms for each lithofacies, although most samples plot in or below the class 3 field of Lucia, reflecting the presence of abundant lime-mud matrix. Because of the wide range of porosity in each of the main lithofacies, an arbitrary division at 20% porosity is used in combination with lithofacies to define RRT with both three-dimensional (3D) geological significance and distinct ranges of permeability and capillary pressure characteristics. The use of total porosity as a rock-typing criterion is based on the interpretation that porosity is controlled on the reservoir scale by the depositional clay content of the local stratigraphic environment. The seaward and uppermost parts of the clinoforms a have low clay, and, thus, highest porosity. Because both lithofacies and porosity are linked to the sedimentological and stratigraphic organization of the Upper Shu’aiba clinoforms, the RRT can potentially be implemented in a reservoir model for assigning distinct ranges of petrophysical properties to the different architectural elements comprising each clinoform. Two additional grain-dominated RRT have also been defined in a single core that was available from a second oilfield.

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/content/journals/10.1144/petgeo2014-024
2014-11-01
2024-04-26
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  • Article Type: Research Article

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