Page 288 - Geology of Carbonate Reservoirs
P. 288
INDEX
Accessibility, 34, 66, 72. See also Pore-to-pore saturation exponent (n), 62
throat (size) ratio tortuosity exponent (a), 59
Accommodation, 79 Architecture
Agha Jari field, Iran, 191 basin, 76
Amal fi eld, Libya, 190 reservoir, 77, 86, 203
Analogs (“look-alikes”), 7, 156 sequence, 102
Analysis, complete core, 58 Asmari fi eld, 184
Anatomy, depositional units, 89–90 Asmari Limestone, Kirkuk field, 191, 240
Andros Island, Bahamas Attached
fracture-related caves on, 226–227 beach-dune succession, 96, 111
tidal fl ats on, 117 shoreline, 82
Angle, contact (wettability), 62 Australia, 124. See also “Roaring 40s”
Anhydrite, pore fi lling and replacement, 166, Lacepede shelf, 125, 211
248 Shark Bay, 203
Anhydrite-gypsum, stability relationships of,
166 Baffles, to reservoir flow, 1, 41, 107, 145
Anoxia, 98 Balearic Islands, 115
Anoxic, 130 Barriers, to reservoir flow, 1, 41, 107, 145, 250
Antecedent topography (bathymetry), types of, Berm, storm, 112
82 Bioturbation, 15
Aquifers, groundwater, 4 Black Sea, 129
API units (gamma ray log), 161 Bossier Shale Formation, isopach of, Overton
Arab D Formation, 61, 211 field, Texas, 228
Archie Boundaries
cementation exponent (m), 10, 59 facies, 77
equation, 59 time, 77
formation factor (F), 59 Breccias, karst related, crackle and mosaic, 162
resistivity index (I), 61 Brittle domain, 177. See also Material, behavior
resistivity ratio (R t /R o ), 61 under stress
Geology of Carbonate Reservoirs: The Identification, Description, and Characterization of Hydrocarbon
Reservoirs in Carbonate Rocks
By Wayne M. Ahr Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
269