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Subsurface Lithofacies Analysis of the Fluvial Early Permian Warchha Sandstone, Potwar Basin, Pakistan


Affiliations
1 Institute of Geology, Punjab University, Quaid-i-Azam Campus, Lahore-54590, Pakistan
2 School of Earth and Environment, Earth Science Building, The University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom
     

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The Early Permian Warchha Sandstone is well preserved in subsurface in the Potwar Basin and the Punjab Plain of Pakistan. However, this succession is only exposed in the Salt Range, and within this region, only a modest number of the many outcrops are of sufficient quality to enable the preparation of lateral and vertical log profiles. From the subsurface, data from five wells drilled in the Salt Range and Potwar Basin have been analysed. Although they are of restricted coverage, these subsurface data - which take the form of gamma ray logs and well cuttings - provide a valuable addition to the outcrop dataset of the Warchha Sandstone as they provide useful information about vertical textural changes, type and thickness of bedding and the nature of sandbody contacts with underlying strata. Overall, the Warchha Sandstone succession is composed of repeated fining-upwards cycles indicative of a meandering fluvial succession. Sub-components of each cycle are themselves classified into six subsurface sedimentary facies. Through comparison with outcropping parts of the succession, the origin and significance of these subsurface facies can be related to specific architectural elements within the meandering fluvial system responsible for generating the Warchha Sandstone succession.

Keywords

Cyclicity, Gamma-Ray Log, well Cuttings, Facies, Fluvial.
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  • Subsurface Lithofacies Analysis of the Fluvial Early Permian Warchha Sandstone, Potwar Basin, Pakistan

Abstract Views: 179  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Shahid Ghazi
Institute of Geology, Punjab University, Quaid-i-Azam Campus, Lahore-54590, Pakistan
Nigel P. Mountney
School of Earth and Environment, Earth Science Building, The University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom

Abstract


The Early Permian Warchha Sandstone is well preserved in subsurface in the Potwar Basin and the Punjab Plain of Pakistan. However, this succession is only exposed in the Salt Range, and within this region, only a modest number of the many outcrops are of sufficient quality to enable the preparation of lateral and vertical log profiles. From the subsurface, data from five wells drilled in the Salt Range and Potwar Basin have been analysed. Although they are of restricted coverage, these subsurface data - which take the form of gamma ray logs and well cuttings - provide a valuable addition to the outcrop dataset of the Warchha Sandstone as they provide useful information about vertical textural changes, type and thickness of bedding and the nature of sandbody contacts with underlying strata. Overall, the Warchha Sandstone succession is composed of repeated fining-upwards cycles indicative of a meandering fluvial succession. Sub-components of each cycle are themselves classified into six subsurface sedimentary facies. Through comparison with outcropping parts of the succession, the origin and significance of these subsurface facies can be related to specific architectural elements within the meandering fluvial system responsible for generating the Warchha Sandstone succession.

Keywords


Cyclicity, Gamma-Ray Log, well Cuttings, Facies, Fluvial.