AUDAX EXPLORATION, INC                                

P.O. BOX 1825

LINDALE, TX 75771
903-882-8813 BUSINESS/FAX

 

EAST FORK PROSPECT

Kaufman County, TX

 

 

One of the three remaining major exploration plays to be made is the Lower Paleozoics structures under younger Permo-Penn thrusting. The formations associated with these structures in large measure are restricted to the Simpson and Arbuckle Groups. Both are excellent reservoirs and producers in Oklahoma, Texas, Michigan and Ohio. Of late the Middle Ordovician has been extended into New York, West Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky.

 

The Simpson has been under-explored in Texas, particularly in Central Texas. Even the lower portions of the Arbuckle below the West Spring Creek and Kindblade Formations, for all practical purposes, is virgin to exploration even in Oklahoma.

 

Reduced to the simplest terms, the various formations within the Arbuckle Group exhibit reservoir properties when their geologic history is comprised of certain discrete tectonic events. When these events are combined, reservoir rocks result. The Arbuckle produces from essentially two types; one is the eroded remnant typified by Osage County, OK. The second, and most prolific, comes from the type reservoir known as hydrothermal dolomite (HTD), or tectonic dolomite in the common vernacular.

 

HTD results from a series of tectonic and hydrocarbon source processes. The first is that the original fabric of the rock was fine-grained limestone; it in turn was fractured  predominantly by the Permo-Penn orogeny. The limestone was then subjected to hot thermal, magnesium-rich brines invading the fractured formation from below during the Permian heat flow. This in turn converted the limestone into dolomite, causing a volume reduction, or porosity increase. Once the hot brines had done their work, the hydrocarbons followed, essentially trapping into both anticlinal and linear configurations.

 

The porous sections often reach extraordinary thicknesses; KY (570Õ), Arkansas (620Õ), OK (400Õ at Healdon, most of a 2500Õ section at Wilburton, over 300Õ at Cottonwood Creek), Michigan (170Õ Albion-Scipio), TX (400Õ), and TN (320Õ). NY and others exhibit similar numbers. These thicknesses are from microlog and density-neutron logs. Bit drops of 25Õ-50Õ are not uncommon.

 

Reserves range from 500 BCF to 50 MMBO; reservoir sizes are usually in the 1000s of acres from the anticlinal traps to 18 miles x ¾ miles for the linear. Notable fields in OK are SE Hoover, Healdon, Cottonwood Creek, Wilburton; in TX, KMA, Bramlett; NY, Steuben County, MuckÕs Farms, et al; in TN, Swan Creek; KY, numerous fields in Knox  and Adair Counties.

The East Fork Prospect falls into the modified anticlinal category. It is underlain by an extremely strong and large Bouguer anomaly. Regionally, East Fork lies on the Lower Paleozoic shelf edge trending from the McCurtain County, OK to south of San Antonio. It is turn is overlain by the Lower Penn, thin-skinned, buried Ouachita mountain chain. There are very few exploration tests within this 60-mile wide belt; of those, there is a mixed bag of lithology associated with the Arbuckle Formation. As summary of those tests are as follows:

 

Sohio #1 Weyerhouser, McCurtain County, OK; in excess of 300Õ of reservoir 

               quality Arbuckle section. Tested gas with heavies, excellent pressures.

               Large anticline with no root; looks to be thrust from original shelfal   

               position NWÕward. High heat flow exhibited in section, but porosity

               very  well preserved.

 

Hunt #1 Nealy , Lamar County, TX. Large anticlinal structure originally deposited

              within the low-energy SE OK trough. High heat flow exhibited, rocks

              very tight, non-reservoir.

 

IMC #1 Wassom, Hunt County, TX; monoclinal pop-up structure resulting from

              thrusting, no heat flow at all, completely non-metamorphosed, reservoir

              quality rocks within Arbuckle section, with gas shows and water. Seal

              integrity well-preserved, bottom-hole pressures .51 gradient. TD in

              Kindblade Formation of Arbuckle Group. Shelfal deposition.

 

Amoco #1 Price, Ellis County, TX; no data available. Presumed to have              

              penetrated into sub-thrust Arbuckle.

 

Shell #1 Barrett, Hill County, TX;  anticlinal structure, large rollover known               

               as the Waco Uplift. TD in pre-Cambrian quartz diorite. Total section

              Arbuckle was 6000Õ, making the original deposition off-shelf. Well is

              along strike with well penetrating the entire section, with only 3000Õ.

              Structure has no roots, has been thrust over 50 miles NWÕward. Very

              heat flow, marbleized, no reservoir quality at all.

 

The East Fork Prospect occurs along a series of high-amplitude Bouguer anomalies, which in my mind, represent the Lower Paleozoic shelf as it is today. Not one exploration test of the above has been drilled on any one of those anomalies that I consider at or near the original shelfal position. It is the shelfal areas that fostered the higher energy, fine-grained rocks necessary for optimum fracturing in the first place. Moreover, the shelfal position as opposed to off-shelf, is what allowed aerial-sub-aerial leaching and erosion. The latter elements are what indicate paleo-highs. This tectonically undisturbed shelfal area is where I consider the area which has been preserved, and less likely to have undergone high heat flow.

 

 

As we write, there is a well drilling an 18,500Õ well to test a large structure in the northern part of the trend which has over 60,000 acres (yes, 60,000 acres!!) and over a second of structural reversal. It, like East Fork, is interpreted to have been moved very little from its original position on the shelf, and is expected to have reservoir rocks.

 

The East Fork Prospect indicates closure approaching 40,000 acres, perhaps as much as 50,000 acres. The reservoir size indicated by Reeves Exploration is at least 12,000 acres, and may be as much as 15,000-16,000 acres. The relation of trap to structure is in the 40%-50% range, which is within accepted boundaries of fill-up.

 

If the 12,000 acres is productive from the Arbuckle Group, and there is an average of 200Õ of reservoir, then reserves as follows can be accommodated:

 

            12,000 A x 200Õ x .5 MMCFGPAF = 1.2 TCF

 

            12,000 A x 100Õ x 200 BOPAF = 240 MMBO

 

It is somewhat uncertain as to the depth of the objective Middle Arbuckle Group in the test well. To that end, I recommend either buying or shooting a long West-East seismic line across the proposed drillsite and establish proper depth/time relationships. In the alternative, one can run magnetotellurics.

 

As regards to drilling procedures, it had been my experience with HTD reservoirs that drilling conventionally with mud is counterproductive, and will, in most cases, destroy the reservoir. I can prove this with numerous examples in wells with which I am intimately familiar. I have also proved the following method of drilling in HTD reservoirs in TN.

 

1.     Set pipe to the base of the Mesozoic at approximately 2000Õ

2.     Drill with the most effective mode of drilling to the base of the thrust Ouachitas and set pipe. Air is recommended.

3.     Drill the sub-Ouachita section with either air or mist, with steel tanks, essentially completed to the tanks or pipeline.

 

 

Respectfully submitted,

 

 

 

L.F. Berry, CPG

 

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