Thursday, September 24, 2020

Amsden Pool

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The Big Wall field was discovered by The Texas Company in 1948. The main producing reservoir is a stratigraphic unit within which are irregularly bedded sands having a linear distribution. These sands also produce at the Melstone and Northwest Sumatra fields.

Workers agree on most aspects of the Heath formation of the Big Snowy group (Chester) and the Amsden formation, but the relationship of the sand-shale producing zone to these formations has remained conjectural. Initially an Amsden affinity was held, and of late the zone has been placed in the upper Heath formation. Both the lower Amsden and Heath formations are considered Upper Mississippian in age by the U. S. Geological Survey.

One factor has probably caused more confusion than any other in differentiating the producing unit from the Heath. The dark gray to black shale within which the producing sands are found is differentiated from the Heath shales only with difficulty, particularly when examined as cuttings. The sands and shales of the producing zone contain much carbonaceous plant material, the only discernible fossil, as compared with the distinctive marine fauna of conodonts and brachiopods found in the top of the Heath. Compaction slickensides are common in the carbonaceous shale. Cross-bedded sandstones and conglomeratic material indicate a more turbulent environment during deposition than there was in Heath time. Thin pebble conglomerates at the base in many places sharply mark the boundary with the Heath formation. All of the evidence mentioned indicates a hiatus, however brief, which does not favor correlation with the Heath.

Magellan Petroleum announces a new pool:

Magellan Petroleum Corporation through its wholly owned subsidiary, Nautilus Poplar, LLC has completed its EPU 117 well within the East Poplar Unit as a new pool producer in the Amsden formation at a depth of approximately 4800 feet.  The well has just recently been completed and is currently producing approximately 106 barrels of oil per day with no appreciable water on a 10/64th choke with a flowing tubing pressure of 95 psi.  This is the first production from this formation within the Unit.  This well will be closely monitored to determine its ultimate commercial viability.

Mentioned once in this pdf: https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:rtfu4QUls7kJ:https://www.dmr.nd.gov/ndgs/documents/Publication_List/pdf/RISeries/RI-22.pdf+&cd=11&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us.  

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Stratigraphic Map


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