July 2013 Outcrop

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OUTCROP Newsletter of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists

Volume 62 • No. 7 • July 2013


ity ta Qual nt Da e i l c i t Mul

Vol. 62, No. 7

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The Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists 910 16th Street • Suite 1125 • Denver, CO 80202 • 303-573-8621 The Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists (RMAG) is a nonprofit organization whose purposes are to promote interest in geology and allied sciences and their practical application, to foster scientific research and to encourage fellowship and cooperation among its members. The Outcrop is a monthly publication of the RMAG.

2013 Officers and Board of Directors RMAG Staff

Executive Director Emily Tompkins etompkins@rmag.org Office & Programs Manager Carrie Veatch, MA cveatch@rmag.org

President – Debra Higley-Feldman higley@usgs.gov

Treasurer – Mike Kozimko mkozimko@yatespetroleum.com

President-Elect – Matt Silverman MSilverman@bayless-cos.com

Treasurer Elect – Reed Johnson reed.johnson@cometridgeresources.com

Accountant Carol Dalton cdalton@rmag.org

Secretary – Jacinda Nettik Brown jacinda@caerusoilandgas.com

Kristine Peterson k.peterson@laramidegeo.com

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Holly Sell holly.sell@yahoo.com Ron Pritchett pritchett61@msn.com

Cheryl Whitney c.whitney@laramidegeo.com

Debbie Downs debradowns@att.net

Wednesday Noon Luncheon Reservations

RMAG Office: 303-573-8621 Fax: 303-628-0546 staff@rmag.org www.rmag.org

Counselor (1 Year) – John Ladd john.ladd@fmr.com

2nd Vice-President – Laura Mauro Johnson lmauro@newfield.com

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Counselor (2 Year) – Laura L. Wray laura.wray@wpxenergy.com

1st Vice-President – Larry Rasmussen larryr@whiting.com

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ADVERTISING

Borders are recommended for advertisements that comprise less than one half page. Digital files must be PC compatible submitted in png, jpg, tif, pdf or eps formats at a minimum of 300 dpi. If you have any questions, please call the RMAG office at 303-573-8621.

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PROFESSIONAL CARDS Will be actual size. Both black and white, and color art will be accepted. If you are submitting digital files, please save in PC format. Please submit png, jpg, eps, pdf or tif files for ads, artwork or photos at a minimum of 300 dpi. When saving pdf files, export at the highest quality available. An advertising agreement will be sent to you.

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DEADLINES: ad submissions are the 1st of every month for the following month's publication. The Outcrop is a monthly publication of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists 910 16th Street, Suite 1125• Denver, CO 80202

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RMAG May Board of Directors Meeting

By Jacinda Nettik Brown, Secretary (jacinda@caerusoilandgas.com) The Board of Directors meeting was held on May 15th, 2013 at the RMAG office. We began this meeting with approval of last month’s minutes and Mike Kozimko followed up with the Financial Report. It’s worth noting RMAG’s expenses took a hit in April due to the poor turnout at the Spring Symposium, “Making Money with Science.” This event lost money for RMAG. It was held on the same day as the DWLS Spring Workshop. In the future, RMAG hopes to avoid scheduling conflicts such as these. The Publications Committee is happy to report the Outcrop is now paying for itself and making money, much of this is attributed to the lack of printing and postage costs because Outcrop went digital. If your company would like to advertise in the Outcrop, please contact the RMAG Staff. The Continuing Education Committee has proposed adding a co-chair to this committee to add continuity of the position and help with the large workload of the chair position. The RMAG by-laws will be checked to see if adding a co-chair requires a membership vote or if a board of directors’ vote is sufficient. If you’re interested in co-chairing this committee please contact the RMAG staff.

The Industry Leaders of the Future held their first event on May 14th titled, “The Road to Owning Your Own Oil and Gas Company.” This event was free and well attended with positive feedback. The RMAG BOD thanks Neil Sharp and John Mark Strahan for organizing such a great event and look forward to the future ILF events. The Membership Committee has a new policy in place to disseminate funeral details to RMAG members in a timely manner. Friends and family please supply funeral details of RMAG Members in an email-ready blast to the RMAG staff and it will be sent out to the RMAG members. Additionally, The Outcrop would like to publish obituaries of recently deceased members. Please help keep RMAG members informed of their dear colleagues and friends passing by providing this information to the RMAG staff. Although no motions were passed at the May Board of Directors meeting, important RMAG business was covered. I hope everyone is enjoying their summer and some of the RMAG summer events.

If your company would like to advertise in the Outcrop, please contact the RMAG Staff at 303-5738621 or email us at staff@rmag.org or www.rmag.org

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OUTCROP Newsletter of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists

CONTENTS Features

34 2013 Proposed Onthe-Rocks Field Trips 36 What You Need to Know 37 Studies in Geology 65

8 Lead Story: RMAGA – 60 Year Celebration

Association News

10 GeoLand Ski Day 2013 12 Authors and Editors Needed 13 From the Membership Committee 18 Colorado Science and Engineering Fair 20 Thank you to 2012 RMAG Foundation Donors 21 RMAG 2013 Summit Sponsors 27 Connect with RMAG Online! 33 Submit a Manuscript to The Mountain Geologist

Departments

COVER PHOTO Palouse Falls in the channeled scablands of southeastern Washington. The channeled scablands are crossed by erosional valleys downcut during the catastrophic floods caused by the failure of the ice dam that held back Lake Missoula during the Pleistocene. Photo by Dean Bubois.

4 RMAG May Board of Directors Meeting 6 President's Column 14 On-the-Rocks Field Trips: Medicine Bow Mountains 16 Outcrop Advertising Rates 24 New Members 29 RMAG Luncheon Program 31 Bits & Pieces 34 In the Pipeline 38 Advertisers Index 38 Calendar of Events

Volume 62 • No. 7 • July 2013

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President’s Column By Debra Higley

Porosity Across the Denver Basin

Image is of media n percent-porosity contours using H Muddy (“J”) Sand igley (1988) data stone in wells ac of the Lower Cret ross the Denver Wyoming (WY). aceous Basin in Colorado (CO), Nebraska (N E), and

draped county (red) and state (black) lines. Porosity in Weld County is dissected by Bob Weimer’s wrench fault systems (Higley and Cox, 2007, Fig. 6). The primary effect shown on the image is westward-decreasing porosity with increasing burial depth, from the eastern basin to the deep basin just west of Denver. Lithofacies also strongly influence porosity distribution, and contribute, with increased burial depth, to the mostly unconventional oil and gas resources of Weld County, and the mostly conventional resources of the eastern basin. Latitude-longitude locations, vitrinite reflectance for the Lower Cretaceous Mowry and Graneros Shales, and porosity/permeability statistics data are in the “Jsandsto.*” files (Higley, 1988). The various permutations of “ID” column headings in individual files correspond to specific wells that are listed by ID NUMBER” in the “Pordata.*” pre-metadata documentation file. Thankfully, my data publication abilities have improved some over the decades (as in less painful).

RMAG hosts the “What you need to know to implement a successful job change for your career in the oil and gas industry” event this month by the Industry Leaders of the Future RMAG committee. Neil Sharp and John Mark Strahan are committee chairs of these social and informative events. July is commonly a slow time; people are busy with vacations and other important activities. So hot days and nights lead me to mention the first NAPE Rockies, which will be held December 11-13 of this year in Denver (http://www.napeexpo.com/nape-shows/nape-rockies). This is when we’ll be turning the thermostat up instead of down, today’s green yards (depending upon watering restrictions) will be mostly yellow and gray, and we’ll yearn for spring. I’m looking forward to NAPE Rockies, partly because as a research geologist I barely know what a prospect is; it will be very interesting. RMAG is an endorsing society. Through our cooperative agreement with NAPE we will contribute to this event, and RMAG will have a booth in perpetuity, or maybe longer. Denver has become a popular place for petroleum industry events, and RMAG is glad to contribute to NAPE Rockies. One of my research interests is rock porosity/ permeability distribution and pore networks, which tend to be smaller than LinkedIn networks but more appealing in thin section views. The above Muddy “J” Sandstone 3D view is tilted, at 700x vertical exaggeration, and has

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Vol. 62, No. 7

References

Higley, D. K., 1988, Core porosity, permeability, and vitrinite reflectance data from the Lower Cretaceous J sandstone in 141 Denver Basin coreholes; USGS Open-File Report 88-527, 6 p. http://pubs.usgs.gov/dds/dds-069/dds-069-p/OF88_527/ Higley, D.K. and D.O. Cox, 2007, Oil and gas exploration and development along the Front Range in the Denver Basin of Colorado, Nebraska, and Wyoming, in D.K. Higley, compiler, Petroleum systems and assessment of undiscovered oil and gas in the Denver Basin Province, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Wyoming—USGS Province 39: USGS Digital Data Series DDS–69–P, ch. 2, 40 p. http://pubs.usgs.gov/dds/ dds-069/dds-069-p/REPORTS/69_p_CHAP_LIST.pdf.

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LEAD STORY RMAGA – 60 Year Celebration By Germaine Gregg

A Diamond Jubilee was held at Pinehurst Country Club on May 16, 2013. The members and their guests enjoyed greeting old friends and sharing memories of the past 60 years, in the beautifully decorated ballroom. After a champagne toast we enjoyed the wonderful tenderloin luncheon, with music performed by Mary Ann McAllister, Bobbe Harms and Peach Albertus. The entire program was a salute to “The Way We Were” and the committee – Pat Wingert, Joyce Near and Sandy Hatch spent many months preparing the activities. The commentary described the past in segments of 10 years, explaining what had happened to RMAGA each decade. The fashion show featured clothes from past “sew your own” fashion shows as well as fun outfits from each time period. Many beautiful clothes were modeled by members who could still wear the youthful dresses, including wedding dresses. It was delightful to see slim daughters and granddaughters model the clothes. We enjoyed seeing the tap-dance group from the 60s and 70s come out in a chorus line with walkers and perform. It was a day of fun with friends. RMAGA has remained an active group through the years and we still meet every 3rd Thursday, September through May for lunch and to enjoy outstanding programs.

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Jo Gray in her “Mother of the Bride” dress which she made.

Photos by Germaine Gregg

RMAGA has remained an active group through the years and we still meet every 3rd Thursday, September through May for lunch and to enjoy outstanding programs.

The Jubilee Committee, Pat Wingert, Joyce Near and Sandy Hatch Vol. 62, No. 7

Co-Presidents Alys Veal and Jackie Meissner

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Lead Story

Editor's Note:

The RMAGA was formed in 1953 when geologists still actually went out on the wells and were gone for weeks to months at a time. Many of the RMAGA women described multiple relocations, sometimes only one to two days after the birth of a child. One member related how they had moved twenty times before finally remaining on assignment in Denver. The RMAGA provided a community of support for these remarkable women who shared their husband's careers. I was amazed at how many read the Outcrop (even the items most of the members don’t read.) At one time the RMAGA had over 27 interest groups in which the members could share and hone their skills in topics ranging from tap dance or bridge to stitchery. Today there are still nine active interest groups. One member recently celebrated her 100th birthday and several others are more than ninety and still going strong; six of the original charter members received roses at the Jubilee. If ever there was a recipe for successful living it would be the RMAGA, the community, friendship, support and camaraderie among this group of highly talented women, which is inspiring.

Congratulations, RMAGA on your 60th Anniversary. OUTCROP

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GeoLand Ski Day 2013 What better way to spend the day than to hit the slopes with fellow members of the RMAG and DAPL along with several friends, family and industry partners. We started the day at Heritage Square parking lot with a very warm welcome from the people with Petroleum Field Services (PFS) serving coffee, donuts and gifts to all the participates who were ready to board the busses and enjoy the ride. It was a snowy day in the mountains and a good day to have someone else driving. Copper Mountain Re s o r t h o s te d o u r event on March 1st this year and did a great job. We were greeted with 6 inches of fresh powder on top of a 53” base. This was a very welcome sight after a slow start to the winter ski season earlier in the year. The conditions were great and the snow kept coming through most of the day. We had 140 eager skiers, riders and x-country athletes enjoying all the events throughout the day. The entire mountain was in good shape, from the groomed out runs on Andy’s Encore and Collage to the steep and deep powder runs of Triple zero and So Fine up top in the Spalding Bowl.

Vol. 62, No. 7

The day was full of fun and friendly competition with over 40 participants racing the GS gates on the Copperopolis Trail NASTAR course. All these racers were competing for a top spot on the winner’s podium and the choice of some nice awards at our annual Après Ski party. Winners in the women’s division were Whitney “wicked fast” Dahms with a top ranked finish time of 26.72 sec. followed by Carla “too quick” Konopka at 28.41 sec. and Caroline “catch me” Ortega with a time of 28.83 sec. The men’s competition was won by Doug “ the divine “ Potter with a time of 23.45 sec. In second place was Chris “the carver” Gough at 25.29 sec. followed by Gary “dan g erous” Dav i s crossing the line at 25.88. Congratulations to all those who braved the race course this year. Copper Mountain Banquets did a wonderful job hosting our Après ski party in the Kokopelli room in the Center Village area. There was a delicious spread of food and beverages to refresh and restore everyone after a full day on the slopes. Awards and door prizes were announced and given out to many lucky

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GeoLand Ski Day 2013 winners at the party. Thanks to Christy Sports for helping with the door prizes. We had two special top prize winners with a pair of new Atomic skis going home with Steve Alexan and a nice set of woman’s K2 boards to Susan Rickard. At 5:30 PM the buses departed for a smooth and relaxing ride back to Denver with Warren Miller extreme skiing films playing on the video screens and a special drawing of a dinner for four sponsored by Marlowe’s restaurant.

This year’s trip was hosted by both the RMAG and DAPL. Chris Gough and Larry Bennett were Chairmen for the RMAG and Patsy Botts was chairman for the DAPL. Special thanks go out to the sponsors listed below who make this annual event possible. If you weren’t able to join us this year, get in and register early with us next year. Those who did attend thank you for your participation and we hope to see you on the slopes again next year.

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Thank You, Sponsors! Extreme Terrain Burleson, LLP Lathrop & Gage, LLP Double Diamond Sponsors Baseline Minerals, Inc. Bjork, Lindley, Little, P.C. CalFrac Mesa Energy Partners, LLC Noble Energy, Inc. Wellborn, Sullivan, Meck & Tooley, P.C.

OUTCROP

Black Diamond Sponsors Becker Oil Corp. Christy Sports Columbine Logging, Inc. Drilling Info. EOG Resources, Inc. Marlowe’s Meagher Energy Advisors Petroleum Field Services Poulson, Odell & Peterson, LLC SFC Energy Management, LP Stewart Petroleum, Corp.

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Blue Sponsors Allen & Kirmse, LTD Anschutz Exploration Corp. Baker Hughes, Inc. Black Hills Expl. & Production, Inc. Flagg Diamond Corporation Fronterra Geosciences J.L. Obourn, Jr. & Company Green Sponsors: Caerus Oil & Gas, LLC

www.rmag.org


Authors and Editors Needed: RMAG Oil & Gas Fields of Colorado! RMAG is working toward the publication of a guidebook dedicated to short field studies of a set of selected oil and gas fields in Colorado. In large part the format will be similar to earlier publications of this type: a several page article that will include a one page summary with a small set of maps and cross-sections adequate to give the reader a lot of information in a short amount of time. The RMAG committee working on this publication has selected 85 fields for review. In addition, we expect to have extended discussion around several large “resource play” areas such as the Piceance Basin or the Greater Wattenberg complex including the recent horizontal Niobrara play. The committee is currently looking for authors to do field studies and to put together material for publication. Each author may contribute one or multiple field studies. We will also need a group of editors for both technical and copy (grammatical and graphical) review. Please volunteer! Committee contacts below: Dean DuBois, Committee Chair 720-876-5366 dean.dubois@encana.com

Marshall Deacon 303-228-4215 mdeacon@nobleenergyinc.com

James Milne 303-894-2100 x5117 james.milne@state.co.us

Tom Feldkamp 303-228-4146 tfeldkamp@NobleEnergyInc. com

James Rogers 303-832-2328 jim_rogers1@comcast.net Steve Cumella 720-979-0718 steve.cumella@endeavourcorp.com

Chris Martin 720-440-6134 CMartin@bonanzacrk.com

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From the Membership Committee With the goal of “creating an RMAG community spirit that fosters the acknowledgement, respect, and involvement of all individual RMAG members,” the RMAG has recently formed a Membership Committee. The RMAG Membership Committee brings two subjects to your attention, and we invite your participation. The Outcrop will soon be featuring a new section titled “Membership Highlights.” Please use this space to share personal information with our general membership. Appropriate information might include: marriage announcements; birth announcements; job and/or career changes; memorable excursions (such as that trip to Nepal and beyond); etc. Now that the Outcrop is digital, we have more space for sharing interesting and/or fun information and photos. Our RMAG staff has graciously a c c e p te d t h e r e s p o n s i b i l i t y o f forwarding death and memorial service announcements of deceased RMAG members to our membership. We encourage family members and friends of the deceased to submit death and funeral notices via email to staff@rmag. org. So that our staff can accurately and quickly disseminate pertinent information, please convey messages by email rather than over the phone. We understand that sometimes RMAG members feel they are bombarded with RMAG email messages. We ask for everyone’s patience. When family members are sharing funeral information, time is of the essence. Using the RMAG email “hotline” greatly benefits the deceased, the family of the deceased, and the RMAG community members. I appreciate your time and attention.

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On-the-Rocks Field Trips Medicine Bow Mountains

More than two and a half billion years of geologic history are recorded in the rocks of the Medicine Bow Mountains. From an ancient continent and stromatolites to ocean basins and volcanic island chains, the Medicine Bow Mountains are a geologist’s dream to explore. This trip will specifically visit the Snowy Range, which consists of the magnificent quartzite peaks visible from the scenic byway. The Laramide uplift exposed this brilliant white rock with the highest peak, Medicine Bow Peak at an elevation of 12,013 feet. Beyond the Laramide orogeny, the Medicine Bows have added structural complexity due to the Cheyenne Belt, a suture zone that runs through the mountains southwest-northeast. The metamorphosed rocks to the south of the belt were deposited in an ocean basin ~1.79 to 1.75 billion years ago and then were intruded by granite plutons and mafic complexes until 1.4 billion years ago. North of the Cheyenne Belt, a vastly different set of rocks are preserved with an Archean core overlain by metasedimentary and volcanic rocks ~2.7 to 2.1 billion years old. These Archean and younger rocks are over 42,000 feet thick in some areas. Paleozoic time was dominated by regressions and transgressions of numerous seas over this area

By Cat Campbell Trip Leader: Art Snoke, August 17, 2013 Explore the majestic Medicine Bow Mountains on August 17th with Art Snoke, a professor of geology at the University of Wyoming. Highlights of the field trip will include: spectacular exposures of the Paleoproterozoic Medicine Peak Quartzite, stromatolites of the Nash Fork Formation, polyphase-deformed French Slate, mylonitic rocks of the Cheyenne Belt, and Quaternary glacial features and deposits. Note these facts for the trip: (more details to follow). • Maximum number of participants: 30, and 8-to11 vehicles (check the RMAG website Events for registration). • Morning meeting place: Centennial, Wyoming at the Friendly Store (approx. 155 miles from Denver) • Morning meeting time: 10:00 am. • There is no charge for the trip, though drivers please plan for a $5.00 fee per vehicle at one of the stops. • Trip end: 5:00 pm at Centennial, Wyoming. Medicine Bow Peak, elevation 12,013 ft., Albany County, Wyoming. Photo by Art Snoke.

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On-the-Rocks Field Trip of Wyoming. The region was structurally quiescent until the Pennsylvanian when uplift near the present-day Medicine Bow Mountains/Sierra Madre and to the southeast created the Ancestral Rocky Mountains. Erosion reduced this mountain to chain to low relief highlands into the Permian as oceans returned to the area. The boundary between the Paleozoic Era and Mesozoic Era cannot be defined in the rock succession due to lack of fossils in the record. Things changed however in the Mesozoic Era with deposition of thousands of feet of sediment consisting of sands, silts, volcanic and even coal. Most of this deposition occurred during the Cretaceous due to the vast sea covering the land. By the Fossil stromatolite of Early Proterozoic age, early evidence of life on earth, end of the Cretaceous, the compressional found on the field trip route. Photo by Art Snoke. forces of the Laramide orogeny likely produced islands in this seaway allowing erosive forces to were few and far between. Traces of mines and tailings remove the Paleozoic and Mesozoic sections exposing can be seen in the area. the Precambrian basement in the central part of the References Medicine Bows. This uplift continued until the end of Knight, Samuel H., 1990. Illustrated geologic history of the Medicine the Paleocene. Bow Mountains and adjacent areas, Wyoming. Geological Society of Wyoming Memoir 4. For more information please The current scenery of the Medicine Bow Mountains see http://www.wsgs. uwyo.edu/stratweb/MedicineBowMts/ is dominated by the carving of glaciers that receded Default.aspx approximately 15,000 years ago. Shallow glacial Hausel, Dan W. 1993. Guide to the Geology, Mining Districts, and basins are now filled with water throughout the alpine Ghost Towns of the Medicine Bow Mountains and Snowy Range Scenic Byway. Geological Society of Wyoming Public Information environment of the Snowy Range, adding to the Circular No. 32. magnificence of the white quartzite cliffs. Since the glaciers retreated, the appearance of the mountains have changed little except for small traces of mineral exploration that has occurred over the past 100 years. The initial gold rush brought hundreds to the mountains exploring stream bed and digging for the metal; few were successful. The early 1900s brought slightly more successful prospectors for platinum and palladium followed by copper and in the 1970s, uranium. Fluctuating prices caused prospectors to come and go with the last rush occurring in 1977 for placer diamonds, which

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OUTCROP ADVERTISING RATES

Ad Size

Cost Per Insertion 1 Time

2 Times (each)

6 Times (each)

12 Times (each)

Full page

$330

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2/3 page

$220

$200

$185

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1/2 page

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1/6 page

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July 2013


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Salt Lake City, Utah - September 22-24, 2013

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Technical Program Highlights • Lacustrine Basins • Microbial Carbonates: Modern and Ancient • Great Oil/Gas Fields of the Rocky Mountains: A Historical Perspective • Unconventional Resource Plays • Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage • New Resource Plays • Geothermal Resources of the Rocky Mountains

Registration Now Open OUTCROP

photo credit: Eric Schramm

Other Convention Events • 5 Utah-based eld trips and 4 short courses • ACL: Roving the Red Planet: A Field Geologist Explores Gale Crater Dr. Rebecca Williams, Mars Scientist, Planetary Science Institute

• Night at the new Natural History Museum of Utah • Guest hospitality suite and 3 days of special activities

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Colorado Science and Engineering Fair

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The Colorado Science and Engineering Fair was held at the Lory Student Center of Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado, April 11-13, 2013. Regional junior and senior high school winners from across Colorado participate in this event. The RMAG grants awards to exceptional projects in the earth sciences. Susan Wager (Chair), Richard Louden, and Anna Wells represented the RMAG as Special Awards Judges. The RMAG awards Certificates of Excellence and a cash award of $250 from the RMAG Foundation to each of the winners. This year, the winners were:

Logs Since 1971

L OG S G S LO LOGS

Molly Nehring (6th grade) for Have You Been Mooned? (Study of Jupiter, its four Galilean moons and Johannes Kepler’s Third Law of Planetary motion)

OVER 6 MILLION WELL LOGS

Joe Pope (6th Grade) Got Oil? The Study of Oil Absorption in Rocks

FROM THE ARCTIC TO THE GULF OF MEXICO

Hannah DeKay and Raelen Barr – Team Project (8th Grade) How Does Temperature Affect the pH of Cement Creek?

MP

CA WOLF

CAR

DIU

Brisha Wakasugi (12 Grade) The Minnie Lynch: A Comparative Study in the Effects of Parent Material on Water Quality in Ephemeral Streams th

M

EAGLEFORD

There were many fine projects and the judges enjoyed interviewing the all of the students and giving them an opportunity to discuss their work.

Y

LBAN NEW A

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THANK YOU TO 2012 RMAG FOUNDATION DONORS The Trustees of the RMAG Foundation wish to acknowledge the generous support of the Foundation’s donors in 2012. Approximately $35,000 was raised for student scholarships and the general fund which supports geologic endeavors within the geologic community at large. The Foundation, a tax-exempt organization under section 501 (c) 3 of the Internal Revenue Code (Tax ID # 84-0730294), relies on these donations for its ongoing contributions which are made each year from the interest accrued by the fund. In addition to the individuals, companies, and corporations on the facing page who gave in 2012, the Foundation would like to recognize a major gift to the scholarship funds by the RMAG Golf Tournament contributors. Thank you to all who organized and played in that tournament! If any donor has failed to be thanked individually by letter, please contact:

Vol. 62, No. 6 7

RMAG Foundation, #165 Independence Plaza 1001 16th Street, B-180 Denver, CO 80265

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PTTC Summer Workshops Petroleum Geology for Non-Geologists

Tuesday July 9, 2013, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm Colorado School of Mines, Berthoud Hall room 241 Fee: $250 (includes food at breaks, workbook, and PDH certificate) Instructor: Dr. Stephen Sonnenberg (Colorado School of Mines)

Course is for petroleum industry personnel in need of basic geological training. Course participants include: engineering, geophysical, technical support, and administrative personnel. Topics covered include: plate tectonics and sedimentary basins, geologic time; the petroleum system; depositional systems; porosity and permeability; conventional reservoirs; unconventional reservoirs; well log correlation and analysis; contour maps and cross sections; source rocks and seals. The Instructor: Dr. Stephen A. Sonnenberg is a Professor and holds the Charles Boettcher Distinguished Chair in Petroleum Geology at the Colorado School of Mines. He specializes in unconventional reservoirs, sequence stratigraphy, tectonic influence on sedimentation, and petroleum geology. A native of Billings, Montana, Sonnenberg received BS and MS degrees in geology from Texas A&M University and a Ph.D. degree in geology from the Colorado School of Mines. He has over twenty-five years’ experience in the industry.

Petroleum Engineering for Non-Engineers

Wednesday July 10, 2013, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm Colorado School of Mines, Berthoud Hall room 241 Fee: $250 (includes food at breaks, workbook, and PDH certificate) Instructor: Dr. Jennifer Miskimins (Colorado School of Mines)

This one-day short course provides a broad, basic understanding of various petroleum engineering topics for nonengineers. The focus of the course is placed on the design, construction, stimulation, and production of wells. Specific topics discussed include the drilling of wells, rig types, wellbore integrity and design, completion types, casing and tubing definitions, downhole tools such as packers, formation damage, and stimulation including hydraulic fracturing. As the title implies, the course is designed for those who work in the oil and gas industry but do not have a technical background in subsurface topics. Previous attendees that have found the course useful include landmen, technicians, accountants, financiers, and field personnel. The Instructor: Dr. Jennifer Miskimins is an Associate Professor in the Petroleum Engineering Department at the Colorado School of Mines (CSM) in Golden, Colorado, USA. Dr. Miskimins holds B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in petroleum engineering. Prior to joining CSM, she worked for Marathon Oil Company in a variety of locations. Dr. Miskimins is the founder and Director of the Fracturing, Acidizing, Stimulation Technology (FAST) Consortium at CSM. She teaches a variety of courses including completions and stimulation classes, geologic field camps, and petroleum economics courses at CSM and as industry short courses.

Come to Workshops Before and After the URTeC Conference in August!! Stimulating Shale Oil/Gas Wells: Permeabilities from Matching Microseismic and Gas Rates, Defining the Fracture Network, and Implications for Proppant Sunday August 11, 2013, 1:00pm – 5:00 pm, Denver Athletic Club Fee: $75 (includes food at breaks, workbook, and PDH certificate) Instructor: Dr. Ian Palmer (Higgs-Palmer Technologies)

Confessions of a Frac Engineer: 200 Field Studies Prove our Frac Jobs are Not Optimized

Wednesday July 10, 2013, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm Denver Athletic Club, Fee: $250 (includes food at breaks, workbook, and PDH certificate) Instructor: Mike Vincent, Fracwell, LLC Class Descriptions and Register Online: www.pttcrockies.org For more information, contact Mary Carr, 303.273.3107, mcarr@mines.edu

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The Right Source. The Right Course. AAPG’s 8th Annual Fall Education Conference in Houston offers Æ’XG GPNKIJVGPKPI FC[U QH IGQUEKGPEG EQWTUGU NGF D[ VQFC[ŨU OQUV TGPQYPGF GZRGTVUÅ¥at one outstanding price 9KVJ VJTGG EQPEWTTGPV UGUUKQPU GCEJ FC[ [QW EJQQUG VJG VQRKEU VJCV KPVGTGUV [QW What’s more, if you become an AAPG member, you’ll save $300 off the regular non-member price through Sept. 16. 9KVJ DWHHGV NWPEJGU CPF DGXGTCIGU KPENWFGF GXGT[ FC[ VJGTGŨU PGXGT DGGP C DGVVGT QRRQTVWPKV[ VQ GZRCPF [QWT MPQYNGFIG CPF TGXGCN [QWT KPPGT GZRNQTGT

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New Members

Welcome to New RMAG Members... Dean Anderson works for Pioneer Energy Services in Denver, CO.

Andrew Heger lives in Evergreen, CO.

Aaron Bateman works for CGG in Houston, TX.

Zachary Hollon works for Colorado School of Mines in Golden, CO.

Cliff Brooks works for Geospace Technologies Corporation in Houston, TX.

Kyle Hoppes works for Triangle Petroleum Corporation in Denver, CO.

James Brooks works for Intermountain Wellsite Geologists in Nederland, CO.

David Keller lives in Golden, Colorado

Dale Burrier works for Oasis Petroleum in Houston, TX.

Doug Kozak lives in Calgary, Canada.

Kelly Kirkland works Duncan, OK. Jennifer Loos works for AGEISS Inc. in Denver, CO.

Ryan Dobbs works for EnergyNet.com in Evergreen, CO.

Deborah Luckenbill works for Seismic Equipment Solutions in Houston, TX.

John Frame works for WPX Energy in Centennial, CO.

Dan Maes works for Whiting Petroleum in Denver,CO.

Alex Gibson works for Colorado School of Mines in Estes Park, CO.

Sean Marsh works for Denver Sturm College of Law in Denver, CO.

Dan Grenard is a Retired Geologist in Canon City, CO.

Sean Marshall works for Resolute Energy Company in Denver, CO.

Colby Hazard lives in Monument, CO.

Project Planning | Acquisition | Permitting | Surveying | Safety Compliant | Results All crews utilizing OYO GSX Wireless System and AHV-IV 364 Commander Vibrators or Shothole

www.breckex.com Texas Office • Ph: 254-559-7566 • Fax: 254-559-6337 2301 US Hwy 180 East • P.O. Box 789 • Breckenridge, TX 76424 Denver Office • Ph: 303-563-5301 • Fax: 303.260.6401 600 17th Street, Suite 2800 S • Denver, CO 80202

Vol. 62, No. 7

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July 2013


New Members

Thomas Mason works for Venoco in Boulder, CO.

Chris Pulec works for NOV in Denver, CO.

Mark McCallum works for RECON Petrotechnologies in Denver, CO.

Clay Roark works for Koch Exploration Company, LLC in Denver, CO.

Kathleen McDonald works for Cimarex in Denver, CO.

John Sadler works for TGS in Houston, CO.

Jorge Oteo works for Denver CG in Lafayette, CO.

Kristen Schlanser lives in Denver, CO.

Scott Price lives in Spring Creek, NV.

Jonni Westerhaus works for Seismic Equipment Solutions in Houston, TX. Willis Wilcoxon works for Great Western Oil and Gas in Littleton, CO. John Yantosca works for JSY Energy Solutions LLC in The Woodlands, CO. Steve Yokubaitis works for Salem Oil & Gas, LP in Amarillo, TX.

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12–14 AUGUST 2013 COLORADO CONVENTION CENTER | DENVER

REGISTER NOW AT

URTEC.ORG

“With URTeC, the key disciplines and technologies engaged in the development of North American resource plays have finally come together for one integrated event.” Luis R. Baez Technical Director — Unconventional Resources BG Group

Register now for URTeC: The integrated event for oil & gas asset teams URTeC is your ticket to a multidisciplinary, peer-reviewed conference from three of the world’s leading scientific associations — SPE, AAPG and SEG. This is the first time the key disciplines and technologies engaged in the development of North American resource plays have come together for one integrated event. Instead of focusing on a single resource play, URTeC will examine the large-scale impact of unconventional resource plays across the continent, which holds major interest for oil and gas professionals around the globe. The conference lineup includes 340 technical presentations – including oral and ePapers, six interactive panels taking an in-depth look at everything from technologies transforming the future to government regulations, as well as six Topical Breakfasts and six Topical Luncheons. The exhibition will feature a Core Museum and the latest science and solutions for unconventionals. Find everything you need under one roof — register today for URTeC. SPONSORS

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Advisors to the Resource Sector... Leading with Ideas!

Connect with RMAG Online! You can now connect to the RMAG on Linkedin, Twitter, and Facebook.

CONNECT WITH US ON LINKEDIN!

200+ studies for all formations and zones covering the US, Western Canada and beyond: » » » » » » »

Spearfish Oil Bakken North Dakota, Saskatchewan Williston Basin Hydrogeology Sanish/Three Forks Green River, Wind River Basins Milk River Hydrogeology Shallow Gas, Western Plains

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July 2013


RMAG Luncheon Program – July 10th

The Sedimentology of Mudrocks: Organics, Organisms, and Occasional Occurrences

By Jeffrey A. May, PhD, Chief Geologist (Retired), EOG Resources, July 10

At the sea floor, suspension and deposit feeders (e.g., polychaetes and nematodes) may ingest the organics, reducing carbon content.

Mud deposition often has been attributed to slow fallout from suspension into low-energy, frequently anoxic, settings. In reality, sediment delivery and resulting organic content, grain size, and lithology are quite variable. Understanding sedimentologic processes help us better describe mudrock cores and interpret stratigraphic and basinal variations in reservoir quality and mechanical properties. Compositional variability reflects the complex interaction of biologic productivity, detrital input, organic preservation vs. destruction, and diagenesis. Intrabasinal biogenic material includes calcareous and siliceous hard parts of zooplankton and phytoplankton; cellular matter from algae, bacteria, spores, and pollen; fecal pellets; and feeding nets. Much of this matter sinks rapidly as aggregates, not individual particles, removing it from shallow, oxidizing waters. At the sea floor, suspension and deposit feeders (e.g., polychaetes and nematodes) may ingest the organics, reducing carbon content. Biogenic influx is not constant. Extrabasinal carbonate and/or siliceous detritus vies with, and often overwhelms, intrabasinal input. Much extrabasinal material is delivered under the influence of storm waves or density flows. Storms suspend and mold bottom sediment, variably producing waveenhanced sediment-gravity flows, graded tempestites, and hummocky and Continued on page 30 »

Luncheon Reservations & Information Luncheon will be held at the Marriott City Center at California and 17th St. Please check the event listing in the lobby for the room. Check-in/walk-in registration begins at 11:30 a.m., lunch is served at 12:00 noon, and the talk begins at 12:20 p.m. The luncheon price is $30.00. To listen only to the talk, walk-in price is $10.00. If you make a reservation and do not attend the luncheon, you will be billed for the luncheon. Online registration closes at 4:00 p.m. on the Thursday before the luncheon. Cancellations are not guaranteed after that time.

Call 303-573-8621 email staff@rmag.org, or register online.

Your attendance is welcomed and encouraged. Bring a guest or new member!

»

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RMAG Luncheon

Continued from page 29

wave-rippled bedforms. Hyperpycnal deposits form as rivers transit through flood cycles. Ignitive events yield slides, slumps, debrites, and turbidites. Sedimentary structures produced by these various processes may be difficult to recognize or interpret. They typically are subtle, due to small variations in grain size and/or post-depositional bioturbation, or very thin. Thus, the paradigm of grain-by-grain settling of mud onto a deep, quiet, stagnant sea floor is being revised. The concomitant slow, continuous rain of organic matter is unlikely. Instead, mud accumulates under dynamic conditions. Active bottom currents are frequent. Persistent bottom-water anoxia is overestimated; diminutive, often “cryptic�, bioturbation is common. These interacting processes produce deposits of varying reservoir quality and cycles of various frequencies - seasonal, climatic, tectonic, and eustatic – that can be interpreted in core, outcrop, and well logs. Consequently, the study of mudrock sedimentology is generating new concepts that can be applied to rock description and appraisal and mapping of drilling targets.

At the sea floor, suspension and deposit feeders (e.g., polychaetes and nematodes) may ingest the organics, reducing carbon content.

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July 2013


Bits & Pieces USGS Open-File Report 2013–1012

Simplified Stratigraphic Cross Sections of the Eocene Green River Formation in the Piceance Basin, Northwestern Colorado Thirteen stratigraphic cross sections of the Eocene Green River Formation in the Piceance Basin of northwestern Colorado are presented in this report. Originally published in a much larger and more detailed form by Self and others (2010), they are shown here in simplified, page-size versions that are easily accessed and used for presentation purposes. Modifications to the original versions include the elimination of the detailed lithologic columns and oil-yield histograms from Fischer assay data and the addition of ground-surface lines to give the depth of the various oil shale units shown on the cross section. http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2013/1012/

USGS Digital Data Series DDS–69–Z (4/9/2013)

Map of Assessed Shale Gas in the United States, 2012 Old Forty-Four, A Historical and Geological Excursion Over New Mexico's Old Route 44

Dirk Van Hart

Retired petroleum geologist Dirk Van Hart combines geologic and cultural history along the Rio Grande Valley and San Juan River Valley in New Mexico in this new volume. May, 2013, Sunstone Press, 354 pages. Available from Amazon.com, $31.50.

Well Database and Maps of Salt Cycles and Potash Zones of the Paradox Basin, Utah.

Terry W. Massoth

CD (18p., 21pl., 2013, Open-File Report-600, $24.95, Utah Geological Survey http://www.mapstore.utah.gov/ofr600. html OUTCROP

The USGS has compiled a map of shale-gas assessments in the United States that were completed by 2012 as part of the National Assessment of Oil and Gas Project. Using a geology-based assessment methodology, the USGS quantitatively estimated potential volumes of undiscovered gas within shale-gas assessment units. These shale-gas assessment units are mapped, and square-mile cells are shown to represent proprietary shale-gas wells. The squaremile cells include gas-producing wells from shale intervals. http://pubs.usgs.gov/dds/dds-069/dds-069-z/

AVAILABLE:

Access to extensive geological/geophysical data files accumulated over 50 years of oil and gas exploration in the Rocky Mountain province and containing numerous undeveloped and/or untested prospects is available under negotiated consultation and assistance agreement. Call or email for particulars. CONTACT: 303-797-6308 don@dsstone.com 31

www.rmag.org


PetroFecta® from Fluid Inclusion Technologies is a unique approach combining XRF (PDQ-XRF ®), Trapped Fluid Analysis (FIS ®), and High Resolution Photography (RockEye ®) of the entire wellbore from well cuttings or core samples of any age. All analyses are conducted on the same 1 gram sample (up to 575 samples per well) with an analytical cycle of four days. Data provided on a DVD with previewer software. Information about PetroFecta ® and the umbrella of FIT services, call 918.461.8984 or visit www.fittulsa.com

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o t t ip r c s u n a M a it m Sub ed line, peer-review on , ly er rt a u q sts Geologist is a iation of Geologi oc The Mountain ss A in ta n ou in by the Rocky M for The Mounta rs ito d E journal published . 0 0 6 2 t ogy culation is abou or relate to geol on s since 1964. Cir cu fo at th me manuscripts rons. Geologist welco region and envi in ta ase n ou M ky in Geologist, ple ta n ou of the U.S. Roc M e Th r der manuscript fo id e ” fo u n d u n u G When writing a le ty S r o th u ww. w n lo a d a b le “A RMAG website: w e th re fe r to th e d o on ” st gi lo eo this The Mountain G ript according to sc u “Publications – an m r u yo rs. por tant to write thors and edito au h ot b rmag.org It is im r fo e m ti ies to itigate revision ase send inquir le p ; style guide to m 3 1 0 2 in hed is being updated r to issues publis fe re The style guide or om l.c ditor at jtpetr@ao the Executive E ise. hen questions ar w 3 1 0 -2 2 1 0 2 in 964RMAG website (1 e th Back Issues on e bl la ai See d index is av www.rmag.org). e, A bibliography an ag p eb w st gi gist, Mountain Geolo Mountain Geolo e Th to 2009, see The ex d In d 2011, e Bibliography an in Geologist, July ta n also, “Cumulativ ou M e Th , Michele Bishop 1999-2010” by tain 9-80 . DVD (The Moun on le v. 48, no. 3, p. 5 b la ai av e ntain the journal ar no. 4; The Mou Back issues of , 2 2 v. , 5 8 9 1 the -2005 except available through ) 4 o. Geologist 1964 n , 2 2 v. , 5 Some -2010 with 198 RMAG website. e th Geologist 2006 on e lin on 3-573-8621, or MAG office. RMAG office, 30 lable from the R ai av so al e ar s pie issues in hard co

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In the Pipeline July 9-10, 2013

July 9, 2013

PTTC Course. “Petroleum Geology for NonGeologists”, CSM, Golden, CO.

Desk and Derrick Luncheon. For reservations, please contact RSVP@deskandderrick.org.

July 10, 2013

RMAG Luncheon. Speaker Jeff May. “The Sedimentology of Mudrocks: Organics, Organisms, and Occasional Occurrences.”

July 11, 2013

DGS Luncheon.

July 20, 2013

RMAG On the Rocks Field Trip. Mt. Princeton Geothermal Area, Upper Arkansas Valley, CO.

July 24, 2013

Oilfield Christian Fellowship Luncheon. To RSVP call Barb Burrell at 303-675-2602 or e-mail OCF-DenverChapter@pxd.com.

»

If you have any events that you would like to post in this column, please submit via email to Holly Sell at holly.sell@yahoo.com or to the RMAG office at rmagdenver@aol.com for consideration.

2013 PROPOSED ON-THE-ROCKS FIELD TRIPS Month/Day

Topic/Destination

Leader(s)

RMAG OTR Logistics Contact

July 20th

Mt. Princeton Geothermal Area, upper Arkansas Valley, CO

Paul Morgan, Sr. Geothermal Geologist, Colorado Geological Survey

Phyllis Scott

August 17th

Medicine Bow-Snowy Range, WY

Art Snoke, University of Wyoming

Cat Campbell

Sept. 7th

Vineyards, Adobes, and Gravels – Oh My! Wine-tasting and geologic exploration of the North Fork Valley of the Gunnison, Western Slope, CO

Dave Noe, Colorado Geological Survey

Sandra Mark

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August 5 Ͳ 8, 2013 at the CSM: Risk, Uncertainty & Economic Analysis for Resource Assessment & Production Forecasting in Shale and Tight Clastic Plays x Covers the assessment methods required for the technical and economic evaluation of drilling programs in Unconventional resource plays x Designed for Geoscientists, Engineers, and Business Analysts charged with creating value from unconventional resources x Uses realistic games and exercises to illustrate principles of good estimating as well as analytical procedures used to identify, quantify and manage the uncertainty and risk associated with Unconventional resource assessment, development and production

Open Enrollment Tuition: $2,600 per registrant 10% discount with three or more registrations

http://www.roseassoc.com/Open_Enrollment_Courses.html lisaward@roseassoc.com 713 528 8422

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What You Need to Know to Implement a Successful Job Change for Your Career in the Oil and Gas Industry July 18, 2013, RMAG Event, Sponsored by Industry Leaders of the Future (ILF)

tools on how to assemble a great resume, best practices for interview preparation as well as how to attain the greatest value from working with an industry recruiter.

By Andrew Southwell Abstract: Thinking about making a job change? This presentation will highlight several tools to be used to make your next job change a successful venture. It will also provide insight on how to best determine your career priorities in terms of what is most important to you. Is there a new technology or skill you would like to incorporate into your professional portfolio? Is there a perfect place in the U.S. where you would like to live? Do you want management responsibility or less? By highlighting a systematic approach to making a job change, this presentation will provide the audience with

Biography: Andrew graduated with a BS degree in Business Management from Baker University and a MS degree in Human Resources Management from West Virginia University. His interest in recruiting started when he worked as a Human Resources Advisor for Suncor Energy in Denver. He transitioned from that role to recruiting for a local IT staffing agency. These opportunities helped refine his ability to source candidates but more importantly to judge a candidate’s character and overall fit appropriate to his client's expectations. It is with this expertise that in 2007 he founded Southwell & Associates, LLC.

»

Location: OXFORD HOTEL 1600 17th Street Denver CO 80202

AS OUR TOUCH GETS LIGHTER…

THE OPPORTUNITIES GROW LARGER.

Time:

Registration Opens at 4:00 p.m Talk Starts: 4:30 p.m.

Price:

$25 RMAG members $35 non-member -- includes 1 drink ticket and heavy appetizers

REGISTER AT www.rmag.org

Our business is about more than exploration and production. It’s about improving the lives of those around us by helping the communities in which we live and work grow and prosper. It’s about providing our employees with opportunities to make positive contributions and constantly challenging ourselves to ffi ind better solutions. It’s about continuously striving to be a better industry partner and leaving behind a legacy of sustainability wherever we can.

Energizing the World, Bettering People’s Lives ®�

www.nobleenergyinc.com

Vol. 62, No. 7

36

July 2013


Coming in the near future!

Studies in Geology 65

Application of Structural Methods to Rocky Mountain Hydrocarbon Exploration and Development Edited by C. Knight, J. Cuzella, & L. Cress

Co-published by Tulsa, OK and Denver, CO www.aapg.org/www.rmag.org

The American Association of Petroleum Geologists

The Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists

With increasing industry emphasis on developing “unconventional” tight reservoirs and on enhancing recovery from existing fields, geologists are facing new challenges. Identifying fracture characteristics within petroleum systems is essential. Understanding the timing of tectonics and the formation of structures is

important, as these factors strongly influence hydrocarbon generation, migration, entrapment, and preservation. As a means of addressing complex interrelationships between structural geology and hydrocarbon exploration and development, the editors are pleased to present this compilation of key papers.

Studies in Geology 65 Table of Contents

• Using Free-hand 3-D Drawings to Clarify and Verify Subsurface Structural Interpretations — D. Stone • Introduction to Low-temperature Thermochronologic Techniques, Methodology, and Applications — S. L. Peyton & B. Carrapa • Overview of Low-temperature Thermochronology in the Rocky Mountains and its Application to Petroleum System Analysis — S. L. Peyton & B. Carrapa • Using Detrital Zircon Geochronology to Solve Complex Structural Problems: Application with Pitfalls in the Helena Salient of the Montana Disturbed Belt, West Central Montana — P. T. Doughty, K. R. Chamberlain, & M. C. Pope OUTCROP

• Regional and Local Fractures of the Bakken Petroleum System, Williston Basin: Integrating Field Studies and 3-D Seismic Analysis — S. Angster & F. Sarg • Role of Wrench Faults and Fractures in Creating “Sweet Spots” in Tight Gas Exploration and Production at Rulison Field Colorado — T. L. Davis & R. D. Benson • Fracture Control of P-wave Azimuthal Anisotrophy in a Laramide Basement-cored Anticline at Casper Arch, Wyoming: Insights from Correlations with Surface Analogs and Curvature Analyses — R. D. Cooley & E. Erslev

37

• Natural Fractures and Strain Accommodation in the Tensleep Formation at Beer Mug Anticline — S. P. Cooper • Natural Fracture Patterns in Folded Tensleep Reservoirs, Wyoming — S. P. Cooper & J. C. Lorenz • Fractures, Hydraulic Injections, and Strain Accommodation in the Tensleep Formation at Flat Top Anticline, Carbon County, Wyoming — J. C. Lorenz • Beaver Creek Detachment System: Syn-Laramide Gravity Detachment and Folding Oblique to Regional Compression — S. Smaltz & E. Erslev

www.rmag.org


Advertisers Index AAPG......................................... 23, 26

Karo, James C................................ 25

Stone, Don.................................... 31

Bowler Petrophysics...................... 12

Kestrel Geoscience, LLC............... 11

Stoner Engineering, LLC................ 7

Breckenridge Expl. Inc.................. 24

Kluth and Associates........................4

Summit Mudlogging Services.....18

Canadian Discovery........................27

Leaverite Exploration Inc.............. 34

TGS.................................................. 2

Columbine Logging........................ 30

MJ Systems.................................... 18

Decollement Consulting, Inc........ 28

Mazzullo Energy Corp.................... 15

Vista GeoScience, David Seneshen........................... 17

The Discovery Group, Inc............... 10

Noble Energy.................................. 36

Vista GeoScience, John V. Fontana.............................. 4

Dolan Integration Group................ 12

PTTC................................................ 22

Weatherford Laboratories.... 19, 28

Donovan Brothers Inc.................... 25

Quantum Water Consulting........... 25

Weber Law Firm, LLC...................10

Donze, Terry.................................... 25

RMAG................................. 20, 21, 37

Whitehead, Neil H., III.................. 17

Fluid Inclusion Technologies........ 32

RMS/AAPG......................................17

Geosteering.....................................17

RPM Geologic, LLC.........................27

Horizontal Solutions Intl................ 34

Rose & Associates......................... 35

July 2013 SUNDAY

MONDAY

1

TUESDAY

2

WEDNESDAY

3

THURSDAY

4

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

5

6

11

12

13

18

19

20

INDEPENDENCE DAY

7

8

9

Desk & Derrick Luncheon

10

RMAG Luncheon Speaker: Jeff May

DGS Luncheon

PTTC Course

14

21

15

22

16

23

17

ILF Speaker: Andrew Southwell (see pg 36)

24 Oilfield

25

On-the-Rocks Field Trip

26

27

Christian Fellowship Luncheon

28

29

Vol. 62, No. 7

30

31

38

July 2013


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