Skip to main content
Advanced Search

Filters: Tags: Mowry Shale (X) > partyWithName: Thomas M Finn (X)

2 results (9ms)   

View Results as: JSON ATOM CSV
thumbnail
In 2020, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) assessed the potential for undiscovered, technically recoverable continuous (unconventional) oil and gas resources in the Mowry Shale in the Wind River Basin Province (Finn and others, 2021). To better characterize the source rock potential of the Mowry Shale and associated strata, 129 samples were collected from 45 wells from the well cuttings collection stored at the USGS Core Research Center in Lakewood, Colorado. The sampled wells are located along the margins of the basin in order to obtain samples that were not subjected to the effects of deep burial and subsequent organic carbon loss due to thermal maturation (Daly and Edman, 1987) (fig. 1). One hundred samples are...
thumbnail
The Wind River Basin is a structural and sedimentary basin that formed during the Laramide orogeny in latest Cretaceous and early Eocene time. The basin encompasses about 7,400 square miles in central Wyoming and is bounded by the Washakie, Owl Creek and Bighorn uplifts on the north, the Casper arch on the east, the Granite Mountains uplift on the south, and Wind River uplift on the west (fig. 1). Many important conventional and unconventional oil and gas resources have been discovered and produced from reservoirs ranging from Mississippian through Tertiary in age (Keefer, 1969; Fox and Dolton, 1989, 1996; De Bruin, 1993; Johnson and others, 1996, 2007). It has been suggested by numerous authors (Geis, 1923; Schrayer...


    map background search result map search result map Tops file for the Mowry Shale and associated strata in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming New source rock data for the Mowry and Thermopolis Shales in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming New source rock data for the Mowry and Thermopolis Shales in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming Tops file for the Mowry Shale and associated strata in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming