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Featured researches published by Nicolas Christ.


AAPG Bulletin | 2013

Outcrop analog for an oolitic carbonate ramp reservoir: A scale-dependent geologic modeling approach based on stratigraphic hierarchy

Frédéric Amour; Maria Mutti; Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser; Gregory S. Benson; Susan M. Agar; Sara Tomás; Lahcen Kabiri

Considerable effort has been devoted to the development of simulation algorithms for facies modeling, whereas a discussion of how to combine those techniques has not existed. The integration of multiple geologic data into a three-dimensional model, which requires the combination of simulation techniques, is yet a current challenge for reservoir modeling. This article presents a thought process that guides the acquisition and modeling of geologic data at various scales. Our work is based on outcrop data collected from a Jurassic carbonate ramp located in the High Atlas mountain range of Morocco. The study window is 1 km (0.6 mi) wide and 100 m (328.1 ft) thick. We describe and model the spatial and hierarchical arrangement of carbonate bodies spanning from largest to smallest: (1) stacking pattern of high-frequency depositional sequences, (2) facies association, and (3) lithofacies. Five sequence boundaries were modeled using differential global position system mapping and light detection and ranging data. The surface-based model shows a low-angle profile with modest paleotopographic relief at the inner-to-middle ramp transition. Facies associations were populated using truncated Gaussian simulation to preserve ordered trends between the inner, middle, and outer ramps. At the lithofacies scale, field observations and statistical analysis show a mosaiclike distribution that was simulated using a fully stochastic approach with sequential indicator simulation. This study observes that the use of one single simulation technique is unlikely to correctly model the natural patterns and variability of carbonate rocks. The selection and implementation of different techniques customized for each level of the stratigraphic hierarchy will provide the essential computing flexibility to model carbonate settings. This study demonstrates that a scale-dependent modeling approach should be a common procedure when building subsurface and outcrop models.


Petroleum Geoscience | 2014

Numerical simulation of fluid-flow processes in a 3D high-resolution carbonate reservoir analogue

Simeon Sani Agada; Fuzhen Chen; Sebastian Geiger; Gulnara Toigulova; Susan M. Agar; Ravi Shekhar; Greg Benson; Owen J. Hehmeyer; Fred Amour; Maria Mutti; Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser

A high-resolution three-dimensional (3D) outcrop model of a Jurassic carbonate ramp was used in order to perform a series of detailed and systematic flow simulations. The aim of this study was to test the impact of small- and large-scale geological features on reservoir performance and oil recovery. The digital outcrop model contains a wide range of sedimentological, diagenetic and structural features, including discontinuity surfaces, shoal bodies, mud mounds, oyster bioherms and fractures. Flow simulations are performed for numerical well testing and secondary oil recovery. Numerical well testing enables synthetic but systematic pressure responses to be generated for different geological features observed in the outcrops. This allows us to assess and rank the relative impact of specific geological features on reservoir performance. The outcome documents that, owing to the realistic representation of matrix heterogeneity, most diagenetic and structural features cannot be linked to a unique pressure signature. Instead, reservoir performance is controlled by subseismic faults and oyster bioherms acting as thief zones. Numerical simulations of secondary recovery processes reveal strong channelling of fluid flow into high-permeability layers as the primary control for oil recovery. However, appropriate reservoir-engineering solutions, such as optimizing well placement and injection fluid, can reduce channelling and increase oil recovery.


Petroleum Geoscience | 2014

Modelling and simulation of a Jurassic carbonate ramp outcrop, Amellago, High Atlas Mountains, Morocco

Ravi Shekhar; I. Sahni; Greg Benson; Susan M. Agar; Frédéric Amour; Sara Tomás; Nicolas Christ; Robert Alway; Maria Mutti; Adrian Immenhauser; Zvi Karcz; Lahcen Kabiri

Carbonate reservoirs pose significant challenges for reservoir modelling and flow prediction due to heterogeneities in rock properties, limits to seismic resolution and limited constraints on subsurface data. Hence, a systematic and streamlined approach is needed to construct geological models and to quickly evaluate key sensitivities in the flow models. This paper discusses results from a reservoir analogue study of a Middle Jurassic carbonate ramp in the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco that has stratigraphic and structural similarities to selected Middle East reservoirs. For this purpose, high-resolution geological models were constructed from the integration of sedimentological, diagenetic and structural studies in the area. The models are approximately 1200×1250 m in size, and only faults (no fractures) with offsets greater than 1 m are included. Novel methods have been applied to test the response of flow simulations to the presence or absence of specific geological features, including proxies for hardgrounds, stylolites, patch reefs, and mollusc banks, as a way to guide the level of detail that is suitable for modelling objectives. Our general conclusion from the study is that the continuity of any geological feature with extreme permeability (high or low) has the most significant impact on flow.


The Depositional Record | 2017

Disentangling shallow-water bulk carbonate carbon isotope archives with evidence for multi-stage diagenesis: An in-depth component-specific petrographic and geochemical study from Oman (mid-Cretaceous)

Stefan Huck; Stephan Wohlwend; Rute Coimbra; Nicolas Christ; Helmut Weissert

Disentangling shallow‐water bulk carbonate carbon isotope archives into primary and diagenetic components is a notoriously difficult task and even diagenetically screened records often provide chemostratigraphic patterns that significantly differ from global signals. This is mainly caused by the polygenetic nature of shallow‐water carbonate substrates, local carbon cycle processes causing considerable neritic–pelagic isotope gradients and the presence of hiatal surfaces resulting in extremely low carbonate preservation rates. Provided here is an in‐depth petrographic and geochemical evaluation of different carbonate phases of a mid‐Cretaceous (Barremian–Aptian) shallow‐water limestone succession (Jabal Madar section) deposited on the tropical Arabian carbonate platform in Oman. The superposition of stable isotope signatures of identified carbonate phases causes a complex and often noisy bulk carbon isotope pattern. Blocky sparite cements filling intergranular pores and bioclastic voids evidence intermediate to (arguably) deep burial diagenetic conditions during their formation, owing to different timing or differential faulting promoting the circulation of fluids from variable sources. In contrast, sparite cements filling sub‐vertical veins reveal a rock‐buffered diagenetic fluid composition with an intriguing moderate enrichment in 13C, probably due to fractionation during pressure release in the context of the Miocene exhumation of the carbonate platform under study. The presence of abundant, replacive dedolomite in mud‐supported limestone samples forced negative carbon and oxygen isotope changes that are either associated with the thermal breakdown of organic matter in the deep burial realm or the expulsion of buried meteoric water in the intermediate burial realm. Notwithstanding the documented stratigraphically variable and often facies‐related impact of different diagenetic fluids on the bulk‐rock stable isotope signature, the identification of diagenetic end‐members defined δ13C and δ18O threshold values that allowed the most reliable ‘primary’ bulk carbon isotope signatures to be extracted. Most importantly, this approach exemplifies how to place regional shallow‐water stable isotope patterns with evidence for a complex multi‐stage diagenetic history into a supraregional or even global context.


Sedimentary Geology | 2012

Triassic Latemar cycle tops — Subaerial exposure of platform carbonates under tropical arid climate

Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser; Frédéric Amour; Maria Mutti; Rosalind Preston; Fiona F Whitaker; Arndt Peterhansel; Sven Egenhoff; Paul A. Dunn; Susan M. Agar


Sedimentology | 2012

Characterization and interpretation of discontinuity surfaces in a Jurassic ramp setting (High Atlas, Morocco)

Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser; Frédéric Amour; Maria Mutti; Sara Tomás; Susan M. Agar; Robert Alway; Lahcen Kabiri


Sedimentology | 2012

Capturing and modelling metre-scale spatial facies heterogeneity in a Jurassic ramp setting (Central High Atlas, Morocco)

Frédéric Amour; Maria Mutti; Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser; Susan M. Agar; Gregory S. Benson; Sara Tomás; Robert Alway; Lachen Kabiri


Sedimentary Geology | 2013

Alternation of microbial mounds and ooid shoals (Middle Jurasssic, Morocco): Response to paleoenvironmental changes

Sara Tomás; Martin Homann; Maria Mutti; Frédéric Amour; Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser; Susan M. Agar; Lahcen Kabiri


Earth-Science Reviews | 2015

Petrography and environmental controls on the formation of Phanerozoic marine carbonate hardgrounds

Nicolas Christ; Adrian Immenhauser; Rachel Wood; Khadija Darwich; Andrea Niedermayr


Sedimentary Geology | 2014

Response of proto-North Atlantic carbonate-platform ecosystems to OAE1a-related stressors

Stefan Huck; Melody Stein; Adrian Immenhauser; Peter W. Skelton; Nicolas Christ; Karl B. Föllmi; Ulrich Heimhofer

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