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					 Petroleum
                Traps Formed By Stratigraphy An appreciation of sedimentary structures helps greatly in
					trying to analyze dipmeter patterns. Some dip patterns can
					point to several possibilities, so it is nice to know what
					is possible, what is probable, and what is impossible (bed
					boundaries that cross each other, for example.
 
					
					
  1. Unconformities An unconformity is a hiatus in the normal geological sequence
                caused by a break in the process of deposition, by erosion, or
                by structural deformation. It results in a missing amount of sediments
                corresponding to a missing geological time as compared to the
                normal sequence. It is made of two different series of strata
                separated by a surface of unconformity.
 Strictly
                speaking, there are four main types of unconformities:1. nonconformity, in which sediments overlie igneous rocks.
 2. paraunconformity, in which strata are parallel on both sides
                of the unconformity, but some of the rock sequence is missing,
                due to lack of deposition (not due to erosion).
 3. disconformity, in which strata are also parallel on both sides,
                but there is an erosional surface as well as the missing section.
                Lack of deposition may also have occurred.
 4. angular unconformity, in which the strata above and below are
                not parallel. Erosion has almost always taken place.
 The
                last two mentioned are the only ones to concern us, and are illustrated
                below. 
				 Unconformities and disconformity  The
                contact between sedimentary layers and intrusive salt, gypsum,
                and shale domes is very similar to an angular unconformity, but
                the process is caused by compression and the traps are considered
                to be structural rather than stratigraphic. Unconformities
                can be classified:1.
                according to lateral extent as:
 - regional, occurs across a large area or possibly the entire
                basin
 - local, occurs over a small area
    2.
                according to the amount of missing geological time as:- major, where a long time sequence is missing
 - minor, where a short time span is missing
 Since
                there is no change in dip trend between the upper and lower strata
                of a paraunconformity or a disconformity, it may go completely
                unnoticed except for changes in microfossils. However, a disconformity
                may be detected by the following features:-
                weathered zone, reflecting the effects of the work of ground water,
                such as solution vugs or caverns, brecchia, jumbled rock, or cross
                bedding occurring immediately above or below the the disconformity
                surface.
        -
                local erosion, which can result in a local high or local low at
                the unconformity surface. When deposition resumes, this dipping
                surface is filled by the overlying sediments. The erosional surface
                is sometimes apparent on logs. Disconformities
                and angular unconformities are relatively easy to spot on a dipmeter
                log; they are the so-called black patterns, or major changes in
                dip angle or direction. The dip of bedding planes above an angular
                unconformity differs from that of the bedding planes below. The
                underlying strata have been tilted during the period of non-deposition.
                Like faults, angular unconformities are characterized by a change
                of trend of dip (either dip angle or dip azimuth or both). In
                addition, erosion may cut a pre-existing structure and produce
                an irregular topography, characterized by varying dip angles and
                directions on the old surface. There
                may be no significant curve shape anomaly at an unconformity,
                for example where one shale bed lies unconformably on another.
                There may be a resistivity or apparent porosity change due to
                differences in silt content or shale compaction. If the unconformity
                is at the top of a sandstone, the erosional surface may create
                a very sharp break at the top of a regressive sequence or at the
                top of a high energy sequence, but may go unnoticed at the top
                of a transgressive sequence. It
                is easy to mistake a fault for an angular unconformity and vice
                versa, based on dip information only. In general, dip is steeper
                below the unconformity surface than above it, although more recent
                tilting may have altered this relationship. Weathering, local
                erosion, and change in rock quality may occur at an angular unconformity
                as well as at a disconformity, and gouge or brecchia may occur
                at a fault. Both cases produce erratic dips at the boundary. Unconformities
                and disconformities do not always form traps, but if porous rock
                lies below and shale above the unconformity, the regional picture
                may provide the trapping mechanism, especially in the case of
                angular unconformities. The most familiar unconformity sand trap
                in the United States is the East Texas field; it has produced
                over 3.1 billion barrels of oil since its discovery. A
                similar unconformity in Canada, with far less reserves, is formed
                by the Mississippian unconformity, capped by Jurassic shales.
                Similar traps, not too far away, occur where the Jurassic sandstones
                pinch out under the Lower Cretaceous shales. A typical unconformity
                trap is illustrated below. 
				 Typical unconformity trap
 
					
			 2.
                Porosity Permeability Pinchouts As a general rule, shallow water sandstone beds are likely to
                thin, and deeper water beds such as limestones are likely to thicken,
                away from the shoreline. If a rock layer continues to thin in
                a certain direction, it may finally pinchout or lense-out altogether.
                The beds above and below it will then become contiguous. This
                can happen to blanket sands, beaches, bars, and delta fronts and
                are called sand pinchouts. River channel fill and point bars in
                meandering streams and rivers thin toward their edges; this effect
                is also called a pinchout. The thin edge of any sand body can
                be described as a pinchout.
 The
                large Pembina field in Alberta is a good example of this type
                of trap. These traps extend for many miles along a fairly narrow
                belt at the updip limit of the sand. Although sand pinchouts are
                stratigraphic traps, folding and faulting may be important in
                controlling production. Frequently
                porous limestone or dolomite grades updip into a non-porous rock.
                These are called porosity permeability pinchouts and may be of
                local or regional importance. The Carthage gas field in east Texas
                is an excellent example of a permeability pinchout. The producing
                limestone grades updip into an impermeable limestone that is barren.
                Later arching of the sediments formed the Carthage pool that covers
                nearly 250,000 acres.  
				 Sand pinchout (top) and Sand channel (bottom)
 A
                porosity permeability trap is formed when the thin edge of the
                porosity is updip from the thicker part of the zone. 
				 Permeability pinchout trap (shaly sand shown, similar traps
                are also formed in carbonates)
 Obviously
                very complex combinations of deltas, cut by channels, and faced
                by offshore marine bars can exist. An example is shown below. The same comment is true in river channel cut and fill
                situations where meandering streams can provide a complex depositional
                pattern, unfortunately seen only as isolated one dimensional views
                by the logs run in the well bore. 
				 Complex stratigraphic traps
   
					
			 3.
                Reef Traps Reefs are productive in many parts of the world. Many types exist,
                such as atolls, table reefs, pinnacle reefs, barrier reefs, fringing
                reefs, biostromes, and bioherms. They occur as small dome like
                features that may be reflected in the overlying sediments by drape.
                Drape is described in the next section of this Chapter. Some reef
                trends extend for hundreds of miles, such as the Leduc reef trend
                in Alberta. The size of a reef ranges from a few acres to several
                square miles. Seismic exploration is the best way to find reefs.
 The
                reef core grows upward and usually outward as the sea level rises.
                Detrital reef material falls on the ocean side, forming the fore
                reef. The back reef is formed on the lagoon or quiet side by deposition
                of limestone and lime mud.   
				 Reef trap
 If
                sea level rises too fast, the reef may drown and die. If water
                level drops it may begin to grow again, forming very complex structures.
                Some examples are shown below. 
				 Complex lithology of a Devonian reef
 Reefs
                are usually easily identified by draping dips, often extending
                several hundred to a few thousand feet above the reef. Dips in
                the reef core and fore reef are erratic, and those in the back
                reef may be visible or nonexistent. 
  4. Drape Traps 
  Differential
                compaction causes drape over reefs and sand bodies and this can
                form traps. A sandstone or carbonate layer above the bar or reef
                can be bent in such a way as to have closure, that is, the ability
                to contain and trap hydrocarbons. The bending is caused by the
                fact that the reef or sand body does not compress to the same
                degree as the shales to either side of it. Therefore a topographic
                high can be propagated upward through the section for quite some
                distance.
 
				Drape and sag
				 These
                traps look like folds in a cross section or on the dipmeter patterns.
                They were not formed by tectonic activity, but rather by the sedimentary
                process itself. Dips underneath the reef or bar will be regional,
                in contrast to the anticline. Drape is important in identifying
                sedimentary structures from dipmeter data, and is often overlooked
                as a trapping mechanism in the beds lying above the target formation. Drape
                is illustrated schematically  for both the reef
                and the sand bar case. Channel fill can also cause drape, again
                due to differential compaction of surrounding shale. Bedding inside
                the channel may be complex, but is usually regional under the
                channel. However, the mass of a reef or channel sand may compact
                the rock under the body, causing apparent sag below the base of
                the zone.  |