Difference between revisions of "Microfossils in exploration"

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[[Category:Predicting the occurrence of oil and gas traps]]  
 
[[Category:Predicting the occurrence of oil and gas traps]]  
 
[[Category:Applied paleontology]]
 
[[Category:Applied paleontology]]
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[[Category:Treatise Handbook 3]]

Latest revision as of 15:15, 31 January 2022

Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps
Series Treatise in Petroleum Geology
Part Predicting the occurrence of oil and gas traps
Chapter Applied paleontology
Author Robert L. Fleisher, H. Richard Lane
Link Web page
Store AAPG Store

Durable microscopic fossils have a wide distribution in time and space, and their rapid and irreversible evolution and morphologically distinctive evolutionary stages make them excellent tools for measuring relative geologic time. They are particularly useful in hydrocarbon exploration because they can be recovered from both cuttings and cores. Microfossil groups that are too rare in most sedimentary rocks, too limited in overall stratigraphic or paleoenvironmental range, or too poorly understood to be broadly useful in industrial application are not considered in this section.

Utility of microfossils in exploration

In an operational environment, microfossils can be examined shortly after being brought to the surface in cuttings. Well-site analysis permits immediate identification of stratigraphic levels and drilling objectives, minimizing drilling time. Microfossils can also be used to accurately predict overpressured zones in advance of the drill bit.

In the office, microfossil studies allow precise local, regional, and global time-stratigraphic correlations that help in hydrocarbon prospect and trend delineation, regional stratigraphic and geologic studies, and exploitation evaluations. Analysis of microfossils helps scientists recognize paleoenvironmental distributions, which in turn helps us interpret sequence stratigraphy and reconstruct the paleogeography and paleoclimate. Some microfossils function as “paleothermometers” by undergoing irreversible color changes with postburial heating. As such, they indicate hydrocarbon maturity levels.

Principal microfossils

Microfossils useful in hydrocarbon exploration can be divided into five principal microfossil groups based on the composition of the shell (test) or hard parts. The table below shows the principal microfossil groups.

Composition Fossil Group
Calcareous Foraminifera, ostracods, calcareous nannofossils
Agglutinated Foraminifera
Siliceous radiolarians, diatoms, silicoflagellates
Phosphatic conodonts
Organic walled chitinozoans, pollen and spores, acritarchs, dinoflagellates (collectively, palynomorphs)

See also

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