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U.S. Department of Energy
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Geologic characterization and coalbed methane occurrence: Williams Fork Formation, Piceance Basin, Northwest Colorado. Annual report, December 1, 1993-November 30, 1994

Technical Report ·
OSTI ID:71210

The coal-bearing Upper Cretaceous Williams Fork Formation, 1,200 to 2,500 ft thick, is operationally defined on the basis of correlation with the Sand Wash Basin. Net coal thickness is typically 80 to 120 ft and is thickest in a north-south belt west of the Divide Creek Anticline. Depositional setting and thrust faults cause coals along the Grand Hogback and in the subsurface to be in modest to poor hydraulic communication. Thus, meteoric recharge and flow basinwind is restricted. Face cleats of Late Cretaceous age strike east-northeast and west-northwest in the southern and northern parts of the basin, respectively, normal to the Hogback thrust front. Parallelism between face-cleat strike and present-day maximum horizontal stress direction may enhance coal permeability in the north. The most productive wells are on structural terraces and anticlines or correspond to Cameo sandstone development, reflecting fracture-enhanced permeability. As predicted, from an evolving coalbed methane producibility model, extraordinary coal-gas production is precluded by the absence of dynamic ground-water flow. The best potential for coal-gas production may lie in conventional traps basinward of where outcrop and subsurface coals are in good hydraulic communication.

Research Organization:
Texas Univ., Austin, TX (United States). Bureau of Economic Geology
OSTI ID:
71210
Report Number(s):
PB--95-220059/XAB; CNN: Contract GRI-5091-214-2261
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English