South-Central Section - 49th Annual Meeting (19–20 March 2015)

Paper No. 10
Presentation Time: 11:25 AM

STUDY OF PRODUCING RAMSEY SANDSTONE SANDS IN THE BELL CANYON FORMATION OF THE DELAWARE BASIN: PADUCA OILFIELD, LEA COUNTY, NM, USA


HART, Shazia I., University of Texas of the Permian Basin, 506A Vincent st, Houston, TX 77009, shazia.hart@gmail.com

This study uses microscopic, mesoscopic and macroscopic data to characterize the depositional environments and reservoir distribution of the Ramsey Sand of the Bell Canyon Formations in the Paduca Field, Lea County, New Mexico. For various reasons, projected recovery in the field has underperformed. The Paduca is the largest field in size (but not production) of the Bell Canyon formation in this portion of the basin, therefore, increasing recovery in the area is potentially quite lucrative. The study describes previous works in academia and industry that aim to study the Bell Canyon formation, but none of these target the Paduca field itself.

Four (4) cores were described and the various facies extrapolated into comprehensive graphic logs and tied to well logs in the field. The subsurface geometry of the Paduca field was evaluated in great detail as the interplay of interbedded silts with sandstone, structural pinch outs, hydrodynamic complexity, localized concretions of calcite cements and other barriers to flow affect local recovery. Gamma-ray and acoustic logs were the primary electric logs tool in the development of the field and tying the core descriptions and facies analysis to the logs enabled the identification of 2 productive sands in the field. Utilizing a series of cross sections thru the field to correlate the productive sands and the barriers separating the sands, a series of structure and isopach maps were constructed. Evaluation of these maps document: two periods of channel fill that are offset to each other; that the thickest sand is not located at the present structural crest of the field,; and the geometry of the field indicated Laramide and Basin and Range tilting had greatly affected the oil-water contacts.