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					 Classic Dipmeter Patterns For Stratigraphy There are numerous sets of classic dipmeter patterns published
                by the service companies. The set from Western Atlas is included
                here, with captions, to assist you in learning to analyze patterns,
                especially those for which there is more than one interpretation.
                They were chosen over others because they include an SP or GR
                curve shape and a lithologic cross section on the same drawing
                as the dipmeter data for each example.
 
				  Arrow Plot - Disconformity and Angular Unconformity   Disconformity:
                This erosional surface will not be indicated by a dipmeter because
                the dip direction and magnitude do not change.     Angular
                unconformities show up on a dipmeter as a marked change in dip
                angle. The dip direction will probably change in addition.
           
				 Arrow Plot - Angular Unconformity and Drape Over Salt Dome  
 Angular
                unconformity that may be the result of folding of the formations
                before erosion. Similar patterns can be produced by slumping of
                beds below an unconformity. Salt
                dome, a structural feature often found in the Gulf Coast area,
                causes formations to bend appreciably. These forces compact and
                often rupture the formations involved. The dip pattern can be
                in a constant direction with high dip angles. The dip direction
                will normally be away from the center of the dome and will occasionally
                reflect a side profile of the dome.
   
				  Arrow Plot - Festoon or Lenticular Cross-bedding and Tabular
                or Planar Cross-bedding Lenticular
                cross-bedding, erratic dips occurring in definite sets. These
                are the dips commonly referred to as cross-bedding in sands where
                the dips are in all directions. The angle can be up to 30 degrees
                above the structural dip impressed on the adjacent formations.
                This difference is algebraic and dips can vary from above regional
                to below regional, depending upon which direction the beds have
                been tilted subsequent to deposition.   Tabular
                planar cross-bedding, most sets dip in the same direction but
                at different angles. Each set of cross-beds has a consistent angle
                and direction. Individual cross-bed sets can range in thickness
                to a hundred feet or more depending upon the environment of deposition. 
				 Arrow Plot - Nonparallel Cross-bedding and Foreset Cross-bedding    Wedge-shaped
                cross-bedding sets characteristic of aeolian deposits. Patterns
                of markedly different directions with good correlation and several
                arrows in each group; this is probably reflect wind deposition.   Foreset
                bedding found frequently in deltaic deposits. The arrows indicate
                the direction the current was flowing at the time of deposition
                if the structural dip of the region is subtracted from the dips
                recorded. The minimum dips at the base of each sequence frequently
                reflect the structural dip of the area as these were nearly horizontal
                at the time of deposition.
 
				  Arrow Plot - Sand Bar and Drape Inside Channel Sand A
                sand bar can often be detected on the dipmeter if the well is
                drilled where the borehole passes through the steep side of the
                sand bar. The dip increases rapidly to the top of the bed boundary,
                then gradually decreases through the upper beds until structural
                dip is again evident. This pattern of increased dip with depth
                and then a return to the normal trend is also characteristic of
                a normal fault. Here again, the need for some lithology definition
                is important. The
                channel sand shown is an ideal type and many channels are not
                easily interpreted from a dipmeter. Many channel sand sequences
                do not exhibit the increase of dip as the bottom of the channel
                is approached. This increase of dip with depth as the bottom of
                a channel is approached probably occurs only a small percentage
                of the time. Many thick sequences of fluvial (water deposited)
                sands show no indication of this phenomenon. Many people have
                become disenchanted with the use of the dipmeter for interpreting
                stratigraphic traps because its use in channel sands has been
                considerably oversimplified. In deltaic sequence, the "classical"
                pattern is frequently found, but many other channels are not interpretable
                in any simple way from the dip log. 
				 Arrow Plot - Drape Over Reef and Deep Water Turbidite  Carbonate
                reef interpretation from a diplog is fairly straightforward for
                reef facies, but becomes rather complex in back reef facies. Under
                favorable conditions, a reef will grow upward until its organisms
                die due to some extreme change in environment. The reef may then
                be enveloped by deposits of mud. The effect of overburden and
                compaction will shape this new shale around the reef. The shale
                will reflect a pronounced change on the flanks of the reef and
                the shale above will reflect a lesser, but distinct amount of
                dip. When the reef itself is encountered the dip pattern will
                usually be scattered and exhibit increased dip angles. These are
                usually measurement of vugs, fractures, joints, etc., and should
                not be interpreted as a structural picture of the reef. Graded-bedding
                is frequently found in beds deposited by turbidity currents. These
                beds are originally deposited nearly parallel with pre-existing
                surfaces, but may have large dips impressed upon them by orogenic
                movement which has taken place after deposition. The SP may not
                indicate the cyclic repetition if clay minerals are not more abundant
                in the finer grain segments of the turbidites. 
				 Pattern Azimuth Frequency Plot - Stream Channel
                Off Center and Centered
 Bimodal
                distribution of red and blue patterns indicates probable deposition
                in a stream channel to the East of the channel trough. The current
                flow is to the South. Trimodal
                distribution of patterns. This pattern indicates probable deposition
                in a stream channel near the trough and with the current within
                the channel flowing to the South. 
				 Pattern Azimuth Frequency Plot - Barrier Bar
                or Delta Front and Barrier Bar or Tidal Channel
 Unimodal
                distribution of red and blue patterns. Usually associated with
                barrier bar and other shoreline sediments where primary action
                is perpendicular to the trend of the sand body. The angles can
                be more dispersed if the waves hit at angles other than perpendicular
                or if longshore currents influence deposition to any extent. Bar
                trends from East to West and thins to the South. Bimodal
                distribution of dip patterns probably indicating a well drilled
                through the crest of a barrier bar type deposit.
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