TY - JOUR
T1 - Virtual outcrop-based analysis of channel and crevasse splay sandstone body architecture in the Middle Jurassic Ravenscar Group, Yorkshire, NE England
AU - Rahman, M. Mostafizur
AU - Howell, John A.
AU - Macdonald, David I.M.
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding This work was funded by the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission (BDCS-2014-49).
PY - 2022/5/1
Y1 - 2022/5/1
N2 - Well-exposed fluvio-deltaic deposits of the Middle Jurassic Ravenscar Group (Yorkshire coast) provide a direct analogue for North Sea reservoirs, but previous studies were restricted to a few accessible bays. This study used lidar and drone photogrammetry to create near-continuous virtual outcrops, 21 km long and 30–150 m thick, in an area which is largely inaccessible. Remote sensing data were supplemented by 45 outcrop logs and data from 27 pre-existing, behind-outcrop boreholes to improve understanding of the geometries, architectures and stacking patterns of 10 distinct sandbody types; the most important reservoir analogue units are channels and crevasse splay bodies. Channel bodies are 30–2038 m wide and 2– 28 m thick with W/T ratio ranges of 5–105; the majority are multi-storey with an average thickness of 8 m and width of 182 m, while the single-storey channel bodies average 4 m thick and 50 m wide. Crevasse splays are 15–>1285 m wide and 0.3–6.5 m thick with W/T ratio ranges of 50–>541. There is a marked lateral and vertical change in channel body dimensions and facies proportion. The study suggests that the channel architecture and depositional nature of these successions are controlled by base-level fluctuation and floodplain topography.
AB - Well-exposed fluvio-deltaic deposits of the Middle Jurassic Ravenscar Group (Yorkshire coast) provide a direct analogue for North Sea reservoirs, but previous studies were restricted to a few accessible bays. This study used lidar and drone photogrammetry to create near-continuous virtual outcrops, 21 km long and 30–150 m thick, in an area which is largely inaccessible. Remote sensing data were supplemented by 45 outcrop logs and data from 27 pre-existing, behind-outcrop boreholes to improve understanding of the geometries, architectures and stacking patterns of 10 distinct sandbody types; the most important reservoir analogue units are channels and crevasse splay bodies. Channel bodies are 30–2038 m wide and 2– 28 m thick with W/T ratio ranges of 5–105; the majority are multi-storey with an average thickness of 8 m and width of 182 m, while the single-storey channel bodies average 4 m thick and 50 m wide. Crevasse splays are 15–>1285 m wide and 0.3–6.5 m thick with W/T ratio ranges of 50–>541. There is a marked lateral and vertical change in channel body dimensions and facies proportion. The study suggests that the channel architecture and depositional nature of these successions are controlled by base-level fluctuation and floodplain topography.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129484699&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/jgs/article/179/3/jgs2021-017/611651/Virtual-outcrop-based-analysis-of-channel-and
U2 - 10.1144/jgs2021-017
DO - 10.1144/jgs2021-017
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85129484699
VL - 179
JO - Journal - Geological Society (London)
JF - Journal - Geological Society (London)
SN - 0016-7649
IS - 3
M1 - jgs2021-017
ER -