Dillon Falls Astrobleme (The North Zanesville Crater)
Greg Mason (NGO Development Corporation, Newark, Ohio,
USA)
Ohio Geological Society meeting (Columbus, Ohio, USA)
21 April 2003
[Note:
there’s a fair amount of oil geology abbreviations & jargon in the
notes below]
The
Dillon Falls Astrobleme was first imaged in 1993. It has since been
drilled by CGas (several wells), NGO Development Corporation, Oxford Oil Co.,
and Dick Poling. The feature has gone unnamed for a while. Some have
suggested Pete’s Astrobleme [after Pete MacKenzie, who first identified
it on a seismic line], but here it is being called the Dillon Falls
Astrobleme. It is located in the subsurface of Falls Township of
Muskingum County, just northwest of Zanesville, and just north of Dillon Falls
on the Licking River.
Three
seismic projects have been completed over the feature:
1)
FM-1-92/93 extended - a total of 4.5 miles long from southwest to northeast.
2)
FM-2-93 - two miles long from east to west, on the western end of the anomaly.
3)
OH-DE 94 - four individual lines from north to south.
The
Murray Unit # 2, the Murray Unit # 5, the Lett Unit # 1, the West Unit # 1, the
Holbein Unit # 3, the Vandenbark # 3, another Murray # 2, and the Wilson Unit #
3 have all been drilled on the feature.
The
main anomaly is 1.7 miles across on the FM-1-92/93 extended line. This
line shows a central uplift. The anomaly appears to be developed on the
top of the Trenton Limestone [upper Middle Ordovician, sensu traditio] as well,
but this is due to differential compaction.
The
original Murray Unit # 2 drilled by CGas, the 1st well drilled, was
wet. The Murray Unit # 5 well, drilled by Poling, was identical (also
wet). The West Unit # 1 well drilled by NGO was a dry hole, but it is
producing from the Clinton Sandstone [Lower Silurian] & the # 3 sand of the
Rose Run Sandstone [Upper Cambrian]. Another well drilled on the anomaly
hit 90’ of sand and produces gas in the upper part. The Lett and
the Holbein wells, drilled by NGO, are both production wells. These all
have disruption at the Knox Unconformity [~ Cambrian-Ordovician
boundary]. The West Unit # 1 was drilled on what appeared to be remnant
on the outside of the feature. The Lett well was successful - it was
drilled inside the feature, in the trough, and had 100 million cfg of
cumulative production before it went wet.
A
composite of the first two seismic lines (4.3 miles long, from west to east to
southwest) has been put together. It shows the basement is a mishmash -
it has been suggested that this is a karst collapse feature, but Greg Mason
says no, and suggests it is an impact crater/astrobleme.
The
Wilson Unit # 3 was not actually on a remnant, but appears to be on a ripple, a
structural effect from the crater, ~1 mile from the anomaly. It appears
to be an oblate feature, which doesn’t fit with what we know about
astroblemes, but current knowledge about this crater is incomplete.
Eight
wells have been drilled:
1)
Murray Unit # 2-1875 - in October 1994 by CGas - wet.
2)
Wilson Unit # 3 - in October 1994 - on the interior of the feature.
3)
West Unit # 1 - in November 1999 by NGO - on the crater rim - the only
well that strayed from vertical drilling.
4)
Lett Unit # 1 - in November 1999 by NGO - produced 100 million cfg.
5)
Vandenbark # 3 - in July 2000 - wet.
6)
Murray # 2 - in July 2000 by Oxford - produced gas for 6-9 months (60-90
million cfg).
7)
Holbein Unit # 3 - in February 2001 by NGO.
8)
Murray Unit # 5 - in May 2002 by Poling - on the central uplift &
proved there was no central uplift (stratigraphically flat to slightly lower
(5’ lower) than the Murray # 2) - wet.
See
a maximum of 90-135’ of Rose Run/crater center sand fill in the feature.
Greg
Mason correlated e-logs hung on the top of the Gull River Limestone [Middle
Ordovician].
The
Holbein & the Lett & the Murray # 2 were drilled in the crater.
The top-Glenwood Shale [Middle Ordovician] picks are all flat. The
Glenwood thins over the crater rim and thickens in the crater. The Murray
# 2 well was drilled in the center of crater development - got 130’ of
sand, but a dirty sand. The West well was drilled to the lower Copper
Ridge Dolomite [Upper Cambrian], below a developed B Zone. The B Zone
picks are not present in the Holbein and are very low & ratty in the Murray
# 2.
The
sand in the crater center isn’t a real Rose Run Sandstone.
Holbein
- 20’ of clean sand.
Lett
- 90’ of clean sand, with 14’ thick gas cap, and the rest full of
water.
The
wells drilled so far are characteristic of a water driven reservoir.
Mattingly
well - used as a regional well, to the north of the feature.
Top
Trenton structure map - shows an anomaly, but it is subtle - the Trenton is
high to regional over the anomaly.
Knox
Unconformity structure map - again, a subtle pullup, but it is there.
Copper
Ridge Dolomite structure map - picks are present, but they are forced by picks
for mapping, and are probably not useful for correlation.
Glenwood
isopach map - shows the anomaly very well - get 80+ to 90+ feet of
Glenwood. Get a thicker Glenwood over the anomaly.
The
Middle Ordovician Knox Unconformity erosional surface - have 1700’ of
stratigraphy between the Knox and basement. The impact occurred during
development of the Knox Unconformity. It fractured the Precambrian
basement. Can see undifferentiated crater fill (1700’ of it) under
the Knox in this feature. A lake formed during Knox Unconformity
time. Sand fills the lake (eroded from the surrounding plain of old Rose
Run Sandstone deposits) - have concurrently eroding Rose Run Sandstone filling
the crater lake, technically producing St. Peter Sandstone in the crater.
Get 20’ of crater rim uplift. Also get a ripple (ripples?) ~1 mile
out around crater.
Finished
talk with a short movie of a gas flare from the Holbein.
The
Dillon Falls Astrobleme is ~same size as Meteor Crater in Arizona - its
asteroid is estimated to be the size of a semi-truck.
Get
90 feet of 14-16% porosity sand in the Lett well.
No
good stratigraphic markers below the Rose Run in the undifferentiated crater
fill - have doubtful B Zone picks, and no Conasauga picks, etc.
What
about encountering fractures during drilling? The Murray well went
artesian, so pressures may be sufficient to keep wells together when drilling
potentially fractured rock in the feature.
Another
well close to the crater rim is planned on being drilled in fall 2003.
Wright
State academic gravity & magnetic surveys over the feature were a wash -
they showed no anomaly.
Smaller
craters shouldn’t have a central uplift (those smaller than ~3 miles
across - this one is ~1.7 miles across). The original image of a central
uplift is probably a fault, if it is anything at all. The seismic data is
all being reprocessed to get a better look.
[Locality
info. on the e-logs of six of the wells mentioned in this talk:
Murry
Unit # 5 well (permit # 8077) - 644’ NL, 242’ EL, Lot 12, 1st
Quarter Township, Falls Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA.
D.
Murray # 2-1875 (permit # 7892) - 1130’ NL, 595’ EL, Lot 12, 1st
Quarter Township, Falls Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA.
Holbein
Unit # 3 (permit # 8306) - 4930’ SL, 123’ EL, 2nd
Quarter Township, Falls Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA.
Lett
Unit # 1 (permit # 8241) - 760’ SL, 100’ EL, NE Quarter, 2nd
Quarter Township, Falls Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA.
C.
Wilson Unit # 3 (permit # 7925) - 445’ SL, 1940’ EL, 2nd
Quarter Township, Falls Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA.
West
Unit # 1 (permit # 8235) - 5913’ NL, 1403’ EL, 2nd
Quarter Township, Falls Township, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA.]