| 
					
					
					 Sedimentary Models The study of sedimentary structures seems extremely complex at
                first glance, but there are only a few major types (16 in fact)
                of sedimentation patterns. These patterns can be represented by
                a set of models which serve as a basis for interpretation and
                comparison by log analysts.
 Analysis
                models of this type are amenable to processing by an expert system,
                a computer programming style which allows a reasoned dialog to
                take place between a user and the computer. Such a system was
                described by Katherine B. Krystinik of USGS, in "An Example
                Expert System For Computer Interpretation Of Depositional Environments",
                USGS Open Report #85-30. The responses to previous questions dictate
                which questions will be asked next by the system. As you can see,
                the structured question and answer approach is modeled after the
                thought processes of an experienced sedimentologist. In
                using the sedimentary models presented below, you should attempt
                to create a similar logical sequence of questions and conclusions,
                eliminating as many possible solutions as you can, until only
                one answer remains. 
                
                  | 
                      
                        | Sedimentary
                          Structure Analysis - Step-By Step Approach |  
                        | 1.
                          lithology (shale, shaly sand, clean sand, carbonate,
                          evaporite) 2. shale content (laminated, dispersed, amount, distribution)
 3. dip spread (energy level, water depth inferences)
 4. bedding angle (steep, shallow, energy level inferences)
 5. bedding type (planar, festoon, nonparallel, environmental
                          inferences)
 6. bedding frequency (thin, thick, massive, cyclic,
                          seasonal)
 7. overall curve shape (fining, coarsening, cylindrical,
                          smooth, serrated, combinations)
 8. internal structure (minor curve shapes within larger
                          ones)
 9. dip patterns (regional dip removal, absolute red
                          and blue patterns, internal dip patterns or cycles)
 10. deductive interpretation (what do the environment
                          and dip patterns mean)
 
 |  |  Additional
                hints on interpretation techniques are listed in below,
                taken from Ed Bigelow's masterful paper "Making More Intelligent
                Use of Dipmeter Data", The Log Analyst, Jan 1985. Examples
                and quality control methods are also covered in that paper, which
                is highly recommended reading.   
				 Ed Bigelow's flowchart for stratigraphic analysis
                of dipmeter data
 The following sections review each model in detail, and give analysis
                rules and examples for comparison with your own work. The majority
                of the examples and some of the descriptive material was taken
                from "Reservoir Delineation By Wireline Techniques"
                by J. F. Goetz, W. J. Prins, and J. F. Logan, published in The
                Log Analyst, June, 1977. Readers
                interested in more detail than can be presented in this Chapter
                may wish to study "Sedimentary Environments From Wireline
                Logs" by Oberto Serra, published by Schlumberger, 1985; a
                211 page review of the subject. This book is packed with examples
                and amplification of the sedimentary models presented here. Some
                of the following sections were condensed from this reference. 
				
			 Glacial Deposits Glaciers are often thought of as modern deposits, but glaciated
                terrain is present in the subsurface as far back as late Ordovician
                time, with numerous periods of glaciation scattered throughout
                the geological time scale. Glaciers leave moraines and drumlins
                on the surface and delta/varve complexes in glacial lakes. Moraines
                and drumlins are not stratified and no legitimate dips are likely
                to be present. Spread in dip angle and direction will be large.
 Varves
                are very thin, roughly horizontal layers deposited in a glacial
                lake bottom from debris rafted out by the ice. At the edge of
                the lake, distributary channels deliver sediment to delta type
                deposits with typical delta front foreset beds. Dipmeter patterns
                look like delta front distributary mouth bar patterns, but bedding
                planes are very close together. These occur only behind a receding
                ice front. Advancing ice will scour away any evidence of the lacustrine
                delta. A schematic drawing of a glacial lake
                environment and a typical dipmeter in a glacial environment
				appear below. 
				 Stratigraphic model and dipmeter in glacial
                environment
 
  Alluvial
                Fan and Scree Slope Deposits Alluvial fans are composed of rock fragments, gravel, sand, and
                mud washed down from a steep slope onto a flatter surface. Boulders
                and coarse materials settle to the top to form a generally coarsening
                upward sequence. Transportation is by both water and gravity.
                Debris falls dominate on steep slopes. Water channels alternately
                erode and deposit downstream, making a very erratic depositional
                sequence over short intervals.
 Alluvial
                fans are long in the down slope direction and very narrow. Thickness
                varies from a few hundred to several thousand meters. Dip angle
                is high and scattered. Dip direction is not a good indicator of
                body geometry. The lower reaches of the fan may grade into a braided
                stream environment.  
				 Stratigraphic model and dipmeter in scree slope
                environment
 
					
			 Sand Dunes There are three major types of dunes: transverse, barchan, and
                seif dunes. Each has a distinctive cross section or cross-bedding
                pattern. Parabolic dunes are similar to a single lobe of a barchan
                dune.
 Wind
                blown dune deposits are often difficult to distinguish from those
                laid down by water. The mechanics of both processes are quite
                similar. Although we normally think of dunes as occurring in a
                desert environment, they often form on beaches and barrier bars,
                as well as on continental deposits exposed to the air, as in present
                day Saskatchewan and many parts of North Africa and China. Thus
                some sediments may go through a wind phase before being finally
                deposited by water. The dune portion of a barrier bar will be
                eroded at the top by wave action; this may be repeated many times. Generally,
                eolian sands are better sorted than aqueous ones, leading to uniformly
                high porosity and permeability. This makes them excellent reservoirs
                if they come in contact with source rocks. Some prolific North
                Sea oil pools are sand dunes. As
                dunes migrate, sand grains are carried up the windward slope and
                then roll down the slip face. This results in cross-bedding with
                enormous set heights. As seen at a borehole, cross-bedding is
                tabular, high angle, and consistent in magnitude through the height
                of almost the entire dune. Consistent cross-bedding for intervals
                of up to 100 feet is common and this distinguishes eolian sands
                from all others. It is also characteristic that individual dunes,
                as seen in a borehole, bear no relationship to one another nor
                to the paleoslope. Wind direction is in the direction of steepest
                dip and sand body elongation is at right angles to wind direction.
                 Curve
                shapes are normally cylindrical with funnel shaped bases, the
                latter being the wadi facies of a dune complex.  
				 Stratigraphic model and dipmeter in sand dune
                environment
 
				
					
			 Braided Stream Channels Braided stream deposits are the result of an interlaced network
                of sinuous channels exhibiting flood stage scouring and subsequent
                channel filling. A channel is no sooner cut than it chokes on
                its own detritus. This is dumped in the form of bars in the center
                of the channel around which two new channels are diverted.
 The
                process is similar to alluvial fan deposition, but occurs on flatter
                ground and gravity falls of debris are not usual. Braided stream
                channels cover a large depositional area. They are straighter
                than meandering streams and rivers, which are formed on flatter
                terrain.  
				 Stratigraphic model for braided stream environment  Braided
                stream alluvium is composed of moderately sorted sand and gravel
                deposits to the exclusion of silts and clays. When sediments are
                well sorted, braided stream deposits show little variation either
                vertically or laterally. Both porosity and permeability are high,
                forming excellent reservoirs. This textural sequence gives rise
                to cylindrical curve shapes when no silt is present and serrated
                shapes when silt is present. A fining upward sequence at the top
                of each depositional cycle is common. As a result, curve shapes
                may show numerous individual patterns which are not correlatable
				between wells. This feature is shown schematically below.
 
				 Dipmeter in braided stream environment
 Silt
                is generally deposited in abandoned channels, giving rise to obvious
                dipmeter channel patterns which are, unfortunately, not very good
                reservoirs. The shale content indicators show this without difficulty. Water
                flow during deposition is highly turbulent, resulting in trough
                or festoon type current bedding. Dipmeter results are erratic
                in both dip angle and direction because of non-planar bedding
                surfaces and incomplete depositional sequences. Dip angle varies
                between zero and 35 degrees while direction may vary up to 180
                degrees, but usually remains within a 90 degree arc, which reflects
                downstream direction and the direction of elongation of the sand
                body. Planarity rating of dip results are low. GEODIP and SYNDIP
                presentation assist in recognizing the non-planar beds. 
  Meandering
                Stream Point Bars 
  Point
                bars are formed in the inside of bends in rivers and streams,
                where the current slows. down and drops out some of its sediment
                load  These bars are small, and difficult to find
                due to the meandering nature of the original river. They are attractive
                exploration targets because their reservoir characteristics are
                usually good.
 
				Stratigraphic model and dipmeter in meandering stream environment 
				 The
                Mississippi River is a modern example of such a stream. Point
                bar deposits are also called lateral accretion deposits. At
                the base is an erosional surface overlain by pebbles and a sequence
                of sands with an upward decrease in grain size. Coarse festoon
                cross-bedded sands grade up into tabular cross-bedded sands of
                diminishing set height. These in turn grade into flat bedded fine
                sands and then into silts. This sequence gives rise to bell shaped
                curves. The
                reservoirs do not take the form of the meander channel but rather
                that of curved, tabular wedges of sand occupying a large portion
                of the meander belt. These may be separated from each other by
                abandoned channel or oxbow lake facies, filled with silt. The
                meander belt can be up to 20 times the width of the stream. Repeated
                reworking of the deposits within the meander belt winnows the
                fine grained material and results in a progressive downstream
                decrease in grain size. It also results in interrupted sequences
                and stacking of several of the basal coarse grained parts. Repeated
                fining upwards patterns (bell shaped) with a coarse grained zone
                of variable thickness at the base of each cycle is common. Dip
                magnitude will be erratic and high angled at the base in the festoon
                bedded sands, progressively becoming more consistent and flatter
                upwards in the tabular beds. Because of the wide swing in the
                direction of the depositing currents and the type of current bedding,
                a variation in dip direction of 180 degrees is normal. The average
                dip direction should reflect the overall downstream direction
                of the meander belt and the trend of the separate reservoirs. 
					
			 Channel Cut and Fill Another type of stratigraphic trap is formed by deposition within
                a river valley, usually called channel fill or valley fill sandstones.
                Meandering streams or delta distributary channels fill with a
                sequence of cross-bedded sands, with the thickest cross-beds,
                and the steepest dip angles, near the basal scour surface. There
                is an upward decrease in the thickness and angle of cross-bedding.
                Channel fill is also called vertical accretion.
 Drape
                over the top of these sand bodies is not usually present. The
                channel fill itself, however, may drape or sag towards the axis
                of the valley. The drape within the channel, depicted schematically
				below, should not be confused with drape ABOVE reefs
                or bars. Check the curve shape or lithology log to verify that
                the drape is inside the channel. 
				  Stratigraphic model and dipmeter in channel cut and fill
                environment. 
				 Foreset
                beds within the channel, shown at left, mask the drape
                effect. 
				Channel cut and fill environment   The
                red patterns still point to the center of the channel, and blue
                patterns point downstream. Pattern frequency azimuth plots are
                useful for sorting out these directions. Curve shapes are cylindrical
                or serrated cylindrical, depending on silt or shale deposition. Bars
                and channels can be mistaken for each other on logs and cross
                sections. In the case of a stream channel, the cross section of
                the sand deposit has it's greatest width at the top and a base
                that is convex downward. The sand bar has a cross section that
                is widest at the base, relatively flat at the bottom, and a top
                that is convex upward. Dipmeter data will usually resolve the
                two cases. The channel may have drape within the sand body; the
                bar may have drape above the sand body. 
					
			 Delta Distributary Channels The meandering streams of the plains areas grade into delta distributary
                channels in the exposed delta areas. These channels are relatively
                straight and are cut into young, soft sediments. Natural levees
                formed of clays and silts contain the channel in a fixed position.
 
				 By
                blockage of the mouth or shifting of the stream above, stream
                velocity may drop and deposition will occur. The depositing material
                is coarse grained and well sorted. Normally more coarse material
                is found at the base and there is a general fining upward. However,
                in many cases, the entire channel becomes clogged with uniform
                sands. These give rise to characteristic cylindrical curve shapes,
                possibly grading into bell shaped at the top. 
				 Dipmeter in delta distributary front environment The infilling of a distributary channel is a rapid process and
                there is no further reworking of the infilling sediments. Current
                bedding therefore reflects stream energy and direction at the
                time of deposition. Current bedding near the base is usually of
                the festoon type. Measured dips are erratic near the base, sometimes
                grading upward into more consistent dips near the top. The direction
                of the channel and thus the direction of sand elongation, is given
                by the average of the current bedding directions. When
                drape occurs in the channel, the dips point at right angles to
                the strike. These relatively low angle dips, when observable,
                are due to channel cutting, and arise from the channel base changing
                in a series of progressively shallower concave surfaces as infilling
                proceeds. Unlike
                braided or meandering stream deposits, which are quite wide due
                to lateral migration of the channels, distributary channel fills
                will produce long, narrow reservoirs, often with very thick sections. Distributary
                channels sit within a delta front sequence (described in the next
                section), and the channel fill curve shapes will be contiguous
                with delta front shapes immediately below. The distributary front
                is characterized by foreset beds (blue patterns) below the base
                of the channel. A reworked sand may separate the two, defined
                by random dips. Two examples are shown below.  
				    Dipmeter in distributary channel
                - distributary front environment
 
					
			 Delta Front Distributary Mouth Bars Deltas are a special form of stratigraphic trap and were deposited
                by ancient rivers. They have quite complicated geometry.
 
				 Sedimentary model in delta environment
 There
                are three main types of deltas:1. bird's foot or elongate, laid down with little reworking of
                sands by ocean current. These are termed constructional deltas.
 2. estuarine or lobate, laid down with some reworking by ocean
                currents and wave action.
 3. arcuate or cuspate, laid down with considerable reworking by
                ocean currents and wave action. These are termed destructional
                deltas.
 The arcuate
                delta appears to be the most important as a potential oil trap.
                Several Pennsylvanian sand fields in Oklahoma are deltaic in origin,
                as are many of the offshore Gulf Coast fields. 
				 Three types of delta
 The
                form developed by a delta depends on the sediment load and the
                relative strengths of fluvial and marine processes. Where river
                currents clearly dominate, a highly constructive bird's foot delta,
                such as the modern Mississippi, will form. These are characterized
                by elongate bar fingers containing the distributary channels.
                Where marine processes such as longshore currents are more powerful,
                a cuspate type delta will develop. An example is the modern Baram
                delta of Brunei-Sarawak. This type of delta has few distributaries
                and grows by pro-grading wave generated beaches. A more balanced
                situation results in a lobate delta form such as the modern Niger. A
                cross section of a pro-grading delta front in a highly constructive
                situation is shown in the bottom half of the above illustration. This shows
                the relative positions and the lithologies of delta front deposits.
                A highly constructive delta is most favorable to the formation
                of distributary mouth bars or delta bar fingers. These are sands
                and silts dropped in front of the mouths of distributary channels
                which suffer little or no reworking by wave motion. The river
                currents are the principal factor in determining sand body geometry.
                Sand bodies usually take the form of elongate or lobate masses
                extending outward from the river mouth. 
				 Dipmeter in distributary mouth bar environment Distributary
                mouth bar sands are relatively fine grained and moderately sorted.
                However, curve shapes reflect a general coarsening upward in a
                highly serrated funnel type configuration. The serrations arise
                from thin shale layers laid down in times of low water flow.  Current
                bedding is normally tabular and dips in the seaward direction,
                perpendicular to the strand line, unless deflected by longshore
                currents. The current bedding dips in the direction of sand elongation.
                The cross-bedding angle is steepest at the top of the sand unit
                and decreases downward (a blue pattern). Individual sand units
                are normally relatively thin. It is not uncommon to have a distributary
                channel cutting through the top of a distributary mouth bar (a
				red pattern on top of a blue pattern).   
				  Dipmeter in distributary mouth bar
                environment
 Distributary
                fronts vary in shape and size due to differences in transport
                speed and volume, and the interference of the ocean. Long narrow
                fronts, as may be found in a bird's foot delta, have a relatively
                high spread in the dip angles of the foreset beds, usually greater
                than 10 degrees. More compact or fan shaped fronts have dips in
                their foreset beds of less than 10 degrees. 
  Tidal
                Channel Deposits Certain delta areas are strongly dominated by tidal forces. In
                this case, rather than the distributaries building outward, the
                effect of tidal currents is to form indentations at the location
                of each distributary mouth. The modern Mahakam delta is an example.
                The outer reaches of the distributary channels are subject to
                tides and there is significant mixing of river and sea water.
 Narrow
                estuaries develop elongate sand bodies with characteristics similar
                to those of distributary channel fills except that cross-bedding
                may be bimodal, that is, cross-beds dip both toward and away from
                the sea in alternating layers. On
                the other hand, very wide estuaries create tidal flats which contain
                some sand, but are often predominately mud. Deposits formed in
                wide tidal estuaries tend to be a grouping of roughly parallel
                elongate sand bars amid silts and muds.
                In cross section, the profile shows coarse sands at the base,
                grading erratically upwards into shales, with a serrated bell
                curve shape.  
				
				Sedimentary model and dipmeter in tidal flat environment If sediment flow is sufficient, tidal ridges are formed, parallel
                to the direction of flow. These have coarse grained tops, and
                generally coarsening upward or cylindrical patterns. Sand body
                elongation in both cases is in the direction of the tidal currents,
                indicated by the predominate dip direction in the sand. 
  Beaches
                and Shoestring Sands When a sea invades an area, several beach sands may be laid down.
                In the subsurface, these become preserved as long narrow sand
                bodies, sometimes called shoestring sands, although this term
                may also be used to describe channel fill sands. Typically, beach
                sands are upward coarsening, regressive type sequences. These
                give rise to smooth funnel shaped curves on logs. Beach sands,
                in their upper sections are normally very well sorted and may
                form cylindrical curve shapes over a fairly thick section.
 Each
                sand is a separate reservoir, and several producing trends may
                develop. Such trends can extend for many miles with production
                confined to the regional noses or highs. The Cotton Valley sands
                in north Louisiana produce along a trend of over 100 miles. Where
                drilling is sparse, it may appear that the different beach sands
                are all the same sandstone body. After sufficient drilling, these
                apparently blanket sands usually break up into their respective
                components. Drilling and production decisions will be drastically
                altered if multiple sands are mistakenly identified as a single
                sand. Current
                bedding reflects the wave action showing gentle, tabular, unimodal
                cross-bedding, with lower angle dips at the base and steeper at
                the top of the sand. The direction of cross-bedding is seaward,
                normal to the direction of elongation of the sand body. Beaches
                cannot be distinguished easily from distributary mouth bars by
                dipmeter data. Stacking of several beaches is common and both
                regressive (funnel shaped), transgressive (bell shaped), and cylindrical
                curve shapes are possible. In
                rare cases, overlying shales may show some draping dip. This dip
                points in the direction of seaward pinchout, but in practice it
                probably occurs over surfaces which have been cut by erosion,
                and therefore may not indicate the coastline orientation. As
                mentioned, beaches generally give rise to long, narrow sand bodies.
                On the other hand, deltas dominated by longshore currents create
                beaches which tend to form to the side of, and between, distributary
                mouths. As the delta progrades, sheet sands are formed with regressive
                characteristics and low angle, tabular cross-bedding. These are
                sometimes broadly classified as delta front sands. Log curve shapes
                and dip data cannot distinguish between these sheet sands and
                narrow beach sands. 
  Basal
                Unconformity Sands A particular type of beach sand deposit is one variously known
                as a basal unconformity sand, strike valley sand, or drowned topography
                sand. This type of deposition originates on erosional surfaces
                which are fairly rugged in profile and have undergone a rapid
                transgression. Low lying areas will tend to collect unsorted detrital
                material. Sands develop on the flanks of the erosional highs where
                wave energy has been sufficient to clean up the sediments. Thus
                sands tend to follow the outlines of the erosional surface, often
                developing on both sides of old erosional channels. One of the
                best known examples is the Granite Wash sands of north central
                Alberta, which are often small reservoirs separated by bald Precambrian
                highs.
 Basal
                unconformity sands have stronger cross-bedding angles, proportional
                to the topographic relief. In addition, there is usually draping
                dip due to differential compaction in the overlying beds. Draping
                dips point away from the local high on the erosional surface.
                Granite wash sands typically exhibit this behavior. These sands
                are composed of granite fragments, feldspar, quartz, and silt.
                They do not have very good curve shapes due to the radioactive
                elements affecting the gamma ray log and the impermeable granite
                affecting the SP. The density log curve shape or a well computed
                lithology log using natural gamma ray spectral and photoelectric
                data may do the job. 
  Offshore
                Bars and Barrier Bars Offshore bars develop in the area where waves break near the shore.
                The incoming water rapidly loses energy thus dropping its sediment
                load. Bars grow parallel to the shoreline. On the seaward slope,
                bars very closely resemble a beach deposit in that they are upward
                coarsening and cross-bedding is gentle and tabular. The direction
                of cross-bedding is normal to sand body elongation. As long as
                the bar remains submarine and is overwashed, dips on the landward
                or lagoonal side are much stronger, reaching 25 degrees in the
                cleaner sands.
 With
                an adequate supply of sediment, a bar becomes emergent, forming
                a barrier. Barrier bars have gentle dips on both sides and are
                often associated with coal swamps or evaporitic lagoons on the
                landward side. The barrier bar is formed by regression of the
                shoreline, and contains three fundamental units:1. upper cross-bedded sandstone unit
 2. intermediate shale, silt and fine sandstone unit
 3. a basal shale and silty shale unit
 These
                units can usually be identified on logs by the coarsening upward
                (funnel) curve shape. If sequence is surrounded by shales, the
                shale may undergo more compaction than the sandstone of the barrier
                bar. This differential compaction, or drape, over the sand bar
                is noticeable on dipmeter data or on well to well correlations,
                and is a strong clue to following the bar for future drilling.
                 
				 Sedimentary model in barrier bar environment
 
				 Dipmeter in barrier bar environment
   
					
			 Marine Shelf Sands (Blanket Sands) Blanket sands originate on large, shallow shelf areas, such as
                the present Bering Sea. A plentiful supply of sediments and a
                persistent energy condition, such as a slow steady current, is
                required. In addition, most of these sands are the result of repetitive
                regressive-transgressive sequences. In many cases, shelf blanket
                sands end up with a regressive sequence and develop bar deposits
                at the top.
 There
                is no good standard type section for marine shelf sands. The shelf
                sands themselves usually have a rounded base and rounded top on
                the gamma ray or SP log, but stacking of these sands, and reworking
                of the top into bars makes the patterns difficult to spot. Erratic
                dips at the top surface due to ripples, scouring, and animal burrows
                or tracks may be visible. Sorting may vary from good to poor.
                Curve shapes, on the average, will exhibit a serrated combination
                funnel-bell appearance. Current bedding is low angle and polymodal
                or random.  
				 Dipmeter in marine shelf (blanket sand) environment
 These
                true blanket sands should not be confused with beaches and bars
                (which are sometimes called blanket sands), as their curve shapes
                and dipmeter patterns are very different, not to mention the reservoir
                extent and quality. 
  Marine
                Shelf Carbonates The character of log curve and dip plots on shelf carbonates is
                very dependent upon the degree of shaliness. Massive limestones
                give rise to cylindrical or straight line gamma ray curves; interbedded
                shale creates a serrated effect. Dips measured in massive limestones
                are likely to present an incoherent pattern, being mainly the
                result of vugs and fractures. To be able to measure meaningful
                dips, it is necessary to have recognizable bedding planes which
                are mainly due to variations in shaliness. The degree of bedding
                is revealed by the character of the dip plot or the GEODIP correlation
                lines.
 
				 In
                subtidal marine carbonate detrital sections, detailed dipmeter
                analysis is fruitful if the data is of good quality. Usually the
                GEODIP program is necessary. Red and blue patterns have their
                usual relationships to transgressive and regressive behavior,
                but they will often be very short patterns due to the slow depositional
                process this far offshore. Dip direction is unimodal, in the deepening
                (usually thinning) direction. Direction of elongation is perpendicular
                to dip direction. Dipmeter in marine shelf (blanket carbonate) environment
				 Bell
                and cylindrical curve shapes usually correlate to red patterns,
                and bell shaped to blue patterns. However the shapes are not taken
                from the usual gamma ray and SP logs. They are taken instead from
                the dipmeter microresistivity curves. Any one of the 4 or 8 curves,
                or the resistivity correlation curve, will do.  
  Reefs
                and Carbonate Banks Reefs are carbonate buildups of skeletal organisms which had a
                rigid framework forming a topographic high on the sea floor. Banks
                are carbonate buildups such as oolite shoals, coquina beds, or
                crinoid debris, also forming topographic highs. These definitions
                roughly correspond to bioherm and biomstrome reefs.
 Present
                day reefs occur mainly in shallow tropical seas. Reef growth requires
                sunlight (clear water, shallow depth), oxygen (rough water), food
                supply, and a favorable temperature. Fringing reefs are linear
                and stretch parallel to the coast with no intervening lagoon.
                Barrier reefs are similar but a lagoon separates them from the
                land. Atolls are subcircular reefs enclosing a lagoon often built
                around a sinking volcano. The
                seaward or fore reef edge of a reef is normally quite steep and
                may form a talus slope of reef detritus at its base. Cross-bedding
                dips pointing away from the immediate reef high can be measured
                in this detrital wedge. The back reef, or quiet lagoonal side
                of the reef, is made up of very fine grained material, interbedded
                with calcareous mud and may show relatively flat beds or no bedding
                at all on the dipmeter.  
				  Sedimentary model in marine reef carbonate environment After
                reef organisms are killed due to some change in conditions, the
                reef mass may be buried in mud. Overburden weight causes compaction
                in the muds leading to sizeable draping dips. Compaction may be
                as great as 50%, generating draping dips as high as 30 degrees.
                Draping dips point down, away from the reef buildup.  
				 Dipmeter in marine reef carbonate environment
                - note drape above
 reef and poor quality or random dips inside
                reef.
 A
                rule-of-thumb has been established to determine the reef shape.
                In the first case, compaction contemporaneous with deposition
                is characterized by low resistivity shales exhibiting a gradual
                buildup of dip versus depth. Here, reef front angle equals maximum
                draping dip plus 10 degrees. If compaction is mainly after deposition,
                characterized by a fairly constant draping dip in the overlying
                shale, then reef front angle is about twice the maximum draping
                dip. In some areas of the world, such as northern Alberta, salt
                solution around the reef accentuates drape, and the above rules
                do not apply. Reef
                porosity is extremely variable and follows no particular pattern
                versus depth. The biolithic zones, or reef core, will normally
                be the most porous. All three usual rock types, biolithite, calcarenite
                (fore reef), and calcilutite (back reef) may develop porosity
                in the form of vugs, fractures, and dolomitization. Porosity curve
                shapes are therefore not very predictable, but the gamma ray will
                be cylindrical. The SP usually will not have a meaningful shape
                due to the effect of nearby impermeable carbonates. The percentage
                of dolomite can be determined by porosity log crossplots and calcarenite
                (limestone matrix) can be distinguished from calcilutite (quartz/chert
                matrix) in the same manner. 
  Turbidite
                Slumps Density or turbidity currents, caused by suspensions of mud and
                sand that periodically travel downslope along the sea bottom,
                are the principal mechanism for transport of silt and sand into
                deep water basins. The deposits are called turbidites
                in North America but are usually called Bouma deposits in Europe.
                These currents result in thick sequences of marine terrigenous
                sediments consisting mostly of cyclical interbedded shale and
                argillaceous, poorly sorted sandstones. Most of the sandstones
                exhibit graded bedding and evidence of scouring.
 
				 Sedimentary model in deep water turbidite sand
                environment
 Turbidite
                deposits can be tabular, elongate, or fan shaped. Individual sand
                beds are poorly sorted, but the upward fining of grain size produces
                roughly bell shaped log curves for each cycle of deposition. Rhythmic
                alternation of graded beds with shales produces a stacking of
                numerous similar curve shapes. A
                characteristic of turbidites, in spite of being a high energy
                deposit, is the absence of appreciable cross-bedding. Dipmeter
                results will therefore show little variation from structural dip,
                and will not be very helpful in defining sand body geometry.
				Below are LOC DIP results for a sand turbidite sequence and another
                from a carbonate turbidite. 
				 Sedimentary model in deep water turbidite sand
                environment
 Turbidites
                deposited in deep marine basins may be interbedded with muds which
                can be hydrocarbon source rocks. However turbidite sands do not
                generally make good reservoirs because poor sorting and clay matrix
                inhibit porosity and permeability. The thin bedding of turbidite
                sands and the intervening shales make reservoirs numerous, but
                thin and disconnected.
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