--> Paleotectonic Control and its Relationship to Wyodak Coal Deposition and Production in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming
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Paleotectonic Control and its Relationship to Wyodak Previous HitCoalNext Hit Deposition and Production in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming

Robert E. Zilinski, Western Gas Resources Inc, 1099 18th St., Suite 1200, Denver, CO 80202, phone: 303-252-6242, fax: 303-450-6927, [email protected] and Donna M. Goldstein, Western Gas Resources Inc, 1099 18th St., Suite 1200, Denver, CO 80202.

Recent mapping of the Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit in the eastern portion of the Powder River Basin suggests a relationship exists between present-day structure, paleostructure, and depositional controls of the Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit. Mapped structural lineaments define depositional limits and net Previous HitcoalNext Hit thickness, which are two key factors controlling gas production.

Slack (1981) mapped several northeast-southwest trending lineaments. These lineaments have been active and controlling facies deposition from at least the Paleozoic Era through the Cretaceous Period. Slack's work showed that stratigraphically trapped hydrocarbons in the Permian Minnelusa Formation and the Cretaceous Dakota, Muddy, Turner, Shannon and Sussex Formations were governed by the relative up-down position of these lineaments.

New work suggests that paleostructure also controlled the depositional environment within the Paleocene Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit member of the Fort Union Formation. Structural mapping of the Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit member, along with dip-angle algorithms, show that the eastern part of the Powder River Basin is segmented into several structural blocks. These blocks are controlled by northeast-southwest trending faults. Faults identified in this study have a similar location and orientation to those described by Slack. These structural trends correlate well with abrupt changes in Previous HitcoalNext Hit thickness shown by the Wyodak Previous HitCoalNext Hit isopach map, areas where the Previous HitcoalNext Hit splits and possibly the location of fluvial channels (no Previous HitcoalNext Hit zones). Gas production from the Wyodak Previous HitcoalNext Hit is controlled by the segmentation and Previous HitcoalNext Hit thickness variability of the Wyodak Previous HitcoalTop swamp relative to these paleo-lineaments.