1. Lithofacies distribution and depositional environment in the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation, BlackGold Lease, northern Alberta: implications for geometry and distribution of oil sand reservoirs.
- Author
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Shinn, Young, Lee, Hyun, Kwon, Yi, and Kwak, Won
- Subjects
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LITHOFACIES , *OIL sands , *BITUMEN geology , *SANDSTONE - Abstract
Within BlackGold Lease located in northern Alberta, the Lower Cretaceous McMurray Formation contains the most prolific bitumen reservoirs deposited in fluvial to tidally-influenced estuarine environments. Based on core descriptions and wire-line log evaluation, this study reveals six lithofacies: cross-stratified sandstone and mudstone-clast breccia (Lf1), sandstone-dominated IHS (Lf2), mudstone-dominated IHS (Lf3), thinly interbedded sandstone and mudstone (Lf4), laminated mudstone (Lf5), and clean sandstone with interbedded mudstone (Lf6). To understand the evolution of depositional environments vertical and lateral associations of lithofacies are examined using well cross-sections and lithofacies slice maps. During overall rise in relative sea level, the McMurray Formation evolved through three stages of deposition: early stage represents fluvial channels with minor tidal influence, middle stage represents tidally-influenced estuary with well-developed meandering channels, and late stage represents a drowning of tidally-influenced estuary. The potential bitumen reservoirs are fluvial channel sandstones in the early stage and lower point-bar deposits in the middle stage. The fluvial channel sandstones are well stacked and correlatable between wells, forming sheet-like sandstone bodies that align in a SW-NE direction parallel to the inferred orientation of major channel systems. The lower point-bar deposits consist mainly of base-of-channel and sandstone-dominated IHS deposits. The direction of point-bar migration, which is crucial in horizontal well design for bitumen production, is inferred from lithofacies slice maps. The lateral changes in lithofacies from base-of-channel to abandoned channel-fills through IHS deposits, shown in lithofacies slice maps, probably indicate that the point bar once migrated toward abandoned channel-fills. Based on this lateral lithofacies trend, the dip direction of some point-bar deposits are approximately estimated to be southwestward or northwestward, which is oblique or perpendicular to the major channel orientation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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