You are in:Home/Publications/Petrophysical Evaluation of the Tensleep Sandstone Formation Using Well Logs and Limited Core Data at Teapot Dome, Powder River Basin, Wyoming, USA

Prof. Aref Adel Ahmed Elaraby Lashin :: Publications:

Title:
Petrophysical Evaluation of the Tensleep Sandstone Formation Using Well Logs and Limited Core Data at Teapot Dome, Powder River Basin, Wyoming, USA
Authors: Muhammad K. Jafri, Aref Lashin, Elkhedr Ibrahim, Mohamed Naeem
Year: 2015
Keywords: Petrophysical Evaluation, Tensleep Sandstone Formation, Well Logs, Limited Core
Journal: Arabian Journal for Science and Engineering
Volume: Not Available
Issue: Not Available
Pages: Not Available
Publisher: Springer
Local/International: International
Paper Link:
Full paper Not Available
Supplementary materials Not Available
Abstract:

This study presents a petrophysical analysis carried out to evaluate the rock properties of the Tensleep Sandstone Formation (TSF) at Teapot Dome, Powder River Basin, Wyoming. The TSF is dominated by porous and permeable eolian cross-bedded sandstones of dune and interdune origin, but also contains marine carbonate/dolomite beds. A-sandstone, B-dolomite, and B-sandstone units of TSF were identified by the stratigraphic well log correlations and further evaluated for hydrocarbon potentiality. Shale volume, lithofacies, porosity, and fluid saturation were identified from the well logs. Permeability was empirically driven from available core data from one well. The computed effective porosity range in TSF subunits is 4–8, 5–14, and 5–20% for A-sandstone, B-dolomite, and B-sandstone, respectively. Permeability was deduced to be 0.001–3.9, 0.01–14, and 0.1–234 mD, respectively. B-sandstone was identified as the most hydrocarbon-bearing potential zone in the TSF with its hydrocarbon saturation ranging up to 72%.

Google ScholarAcdemia.eduResearch GateLinkedinFacebookTwitterGoogle PlusYoutubeWordpressInstagramMendeleyZoteroEvernoteORCIDScopus