Explorer Emphasis Article
By Louise Durham
Terry Engelder is a professor at Penn State and expert on the Devonian black shales – all of which has brought a bit of celebrity expertise to the campus and the Marcellus Shale.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 May, 2013
Explorer Emphasis Article
By David Brown
An affair to remember: Bill Zagorski, the “Father of the Marcellus,” recalls the story of how the now-famed shale play got its start.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 May, 2013
Explorer Emphasis Article
By David Brown
Author Seamus McGraw sees both the upside and downside for the landowner in the development of the Marcellus shale.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 May, 2013
Explorer Emphasis Article
By Louise Durham
High resolution aeromagnetic surveys are being used with great success in Marcellus shale exploration.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 April, 2013
Explorer Article
By Courtney Chadney
Diverse and unique field trips – something for everyone – are planned for the upcoming AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition in Pittsburgh.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 April, 2013
Bulletin GeoHorizon
The Marcellus Formation of Pennsylvania represents an outstanding example of an organic matter (OM)–hosted pore system; most pores detectable by field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM) are associated with OM instead of mineral matrix. In the two wells studied here, total organic carbon (TOC) content is a stronger control on OM-hosted porosity than is thermal maturity. The two study wells span a maturity from late wet gas (vitrinite reflectance [Ro], 1.0%) to dry gas (Ro, 2.1%). Samples with a TOC less than 5.5 wt. % display a positive correlation between TOC and porosity, but samples with a TOC greater than 5.5 wt. % display little or no increase in porosity with a further increasing TOC. In a subset of samples (14) across a range of TOC (2.3–13.6 wt. %), the pore volume detectable by FE-SEM is a small fraction of total porosity, ranging from 2 to 32% of the helium porosity. Importantly, the FE-SEM–visible porosity in OM decreases significantly with increasing TOC, diminishing from 30% of OM volume to less than 1% of OM volume across the range of TOC. The morphology and size of OM-hosted pores also vary systematically with TOC.
The interpretation of this anticorrelation between OM content and SEM-visible pores remains uncertain. Samples with the lowest OM porosity (higher TOC) may represent gas expulsion (pore collapse) that was more complete as a consequence of greater OM connectivity and framework compaction, whereas samples with higher OM porosity (lower TOC) correspond to rigid mineral frameworks that inhibited compactional expulsion of methane-filled bubbles. Alternatively, higher TOC samples may contain OM (low initial hydrogen index, relatively unreactive) that is less prone to development of FE-SEM–detectable pores. In this interpretation, OM type, controlled by sequence-stratigraphic position, is a factor in determining pore-size distribution.
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American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 31 January, 2013
Explorer Division Column DEG
By Tom Temples
As the new president of the Division of Environmental Geosciences I get to begin my tenure with my views and thoughts of an area that DEG, and AAPG in general, needs to address.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 September, 2012
Explorer Policy Watch
By Aaron Rodriguez
Shale gas production is booming throughout the United States and the world due to the success of the cutting edge – and in some corners, controversial – drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 April, 2012
Explorer Article
By David Brown
Have an opinion about hydraulic fracturing? So does the person next to you, which is why Steve Leifer, this year’s speaker at the upcoming DEG annual luncheon, says to look at the big picture.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 March, 2012
Explorer Emphasis Article
By Louise Durham
When it comes to understanding the Marcellus Shale, it’s all about the fractures.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG)
Added on 01 October, 2011