Academic literature on the topic 'Aneth field'

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Journal articles on the topic "Aneth field"

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McPherson, Robert S., and David A. Wolff. "Poverty, Politics, and Petroleum: The Utah Navajo and the Aneth Oil Field." American Indian Quarterly 21, no. 3 (1997): 451. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1185517.

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Slaker, Brent, Erik Westman, Kray Luxbacher, and Nino Ripepi. "Application of Double-Difference Seismic Tomography to Carbon Sequestration Monitoring at the Aneth Oil Field, Utah." Minerals 3, no. 4 (October 23, 2013): 352–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min3040352.

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Naftz, D. L., Z. E. Peterman, and L. E. Spangler. "Using δ87 Sr values to identify sources of salinity to a freshwater aquifer, Greater Aneth Oil Field, Utah, USA." Chemical Geology 141, no. 3-4 (September 1997): 195–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0009-2541(97)00063-6.

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Soma, Nobukazu, and James T. Rutledge. "Relocation of microseismicity using reflected waves from single-well, three-component array observations: Application to CO2 injection at the Aneth oil field." International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control 19 (November 2013): 74–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijggc.2013.08.015.

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Chen, Yu, and Lianjie Huang. "Adaptive moment-tensor joint inversion of clustered microseismic events for monitoring geological carbon storage." Geophysical Journal International 219, no. 1 (June 27, 2019): 80–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggz293.

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SUMMARY Moment-tensor inversion of induced microseismic events can provide valuable information for tracking CO2 plumes at geological carbon storage sites, and study the physical mechanism of induced microseismicity. Accurate moment-tensor inversion requires a wide-azimuthal coverage of geophones. Cost-effective microseismic monitoring for geological carbon storage often uses only one geophone array within a borehole, leading to a large uncertainty in moment-tensor inversion. We develop a new adaptive moment-tensor joint inversion method to reduce the inversion uncertainty, when using limited but typical geophone receiver geometries. We first jointly invert a number of clustered microseismic events using a uniform focal mechanism to minimize the waveform misfit between observed and predicted P and S waveforms. We then invert the moment tensor for each event within a limited searching range around the joint inversion result. We apply our adaptive joint inversion method to microseismic data acquired using a single borehole geophone array at the CO2-Enhanced Oil Recovery field at Aneth, Utah. We demonstrate that our inversion method is capable of reducing the inversion uncertainty caused by the limited azimuthal coverage of geophones. Our inverted strikes of focal mechanisms of microseismic events are consistent with the event spatial distribution in subparallel pre-existing fractures or geological imperfections. The large values up to 40 per cent of the CLVD components might indicate crack opening induced by CO2/wastewater injection or rupture complexity.
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Alapati, Yaswanth Kumar, and Suban Ravichandran. "An Efficient Signal Processing Model for Malicious Signal Identification and Energy Consumption Reduction for Improving Data Transmission Rate." Traitement du Signal 38, no. 3 (June 30, 2021): 837–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.18280/ts.380330.

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One of the fields which needs the most security is Ad hoc Network (ANET). The term ANET guarantees that there is no central authority so as to administer the signals. Security is a basic issue while using ANET for establishing communication. A ANET is an assortment of remote signals that can progressively be set up at anyplace and whenever without utilizing any prior system framework. Because of its volatile nature, it has mobility issues to improve the arrangement of the system. One of the difficulties is to recognize the malicious signals in the system. Because of malicious signals, data loss or high energy consumption will occur which reduce the overall performance of the ANET. There are a few circumstances when at least one signal in the system become malevolent and will destroy the limit of the system. The point of this work is to recognize the malignant signals quickly to avoid loss of data. The conventional strategy for firewall and encryption isn't adequate to secure the system. In this way a malicious signal identification framework must be added to the ad hoc network. A signal needs to be secured when utilizing the resources and to provide secure communication. The ad hoc networks have several issues like, congestion, overload, data loss and energy consumption. In the proposed work a framework for Rapid Malicious Signal Detection with Energy Consumption Reduction (RMSDwECR) Method is proposed. The proposed method is compared with the traditional methods in terms of load in the network, data loss ratio, signal transmission rate, energy consumption levels, malicious signal identification time and throughput levels. The proposed method exhibits better performance than the traditional methods.
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Meng, Yahui, Yunfeng Cao, Kaifeng Xiong, Li Ma, Wenyuan Zhu, Zhu Long, and Cuihua Dong. "Effect of Cellulose Nanocrystal Addition on the Physicochemical Properties of Hydroxypropyl Guar-Based Intelligent Films." Membranes 11, no. 4 (March 29, 2021): 242. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes11040242.

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As an important functional material in food industry, intelligent packaging films can bring great convenience for consumers in the field of food preservation and freshness detection. Herein, we fabricated pH-sensing films employing hydroxypropyl guar (HPG), 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (BmimCl), and anthocyanin (Anth). Besides, the effects of adding cellulose nanocrystals (CNC) into the composite films upon the films’ structures and physicochemical properties are elucidated. The addition of CNC promoted more compact film structures. Moreover, CNC dramatically improved several properties of the pH-sensing films, including the distinguishability of their color changes, sensitivity to pH, permeability to oxygen and water vapor, solvent resistance, durability, and low-temperature resistance. These results expand the application range of pH-sensing films containing CNC in the fields of food freshness detection and intelligent packaging.
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Anseth, Kristi S., and Jason A. Burdick. "New Directions in Photopolymerizable Biomaterials." MRS Bulletin 27, no. 2 (February 2002): 130–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1557/mrs2002.49.

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AbstractThis article is based on the Outstanding Young Investigator Award presentation given by Kristi S. Anseth at the 2001 MRS Spring Meeting on April 17, 2001, in San Francisco. Anseth was recognized for “innovative work in polymeric biomaterials for drug delivery, bone and cartilage repair, and tissue engineering, and for outstanding leadership potential in this interdisciplinary field of materials research.”Photopolymerization provides many advantages as a technique for the fabrication of biomaterials. Temporal and spatial control, along with the diversity in material properties found with photopolymerizable materials, are advantageous in the biomaterials industry. For instance, multifunctional anhydride monomers form highly cross-linked surface-eroding networks directly in bone defects. These networks have good mechanical properties that are maintained with degradation and have the potential to restore tissue-like properties to bone during the healing process. Additionally, cartilage-forming cells photoencapsulated in hydrogel networks secrete an extracellular matrix as the hydrogel is resorbed and may provide a treatment alternative for cartilage defects that do not heal spontaneously. Finally, transdermal polymerization (photopolymerization through the skin) of multifunctional monomers is a noninvasive technique that is being developed for tissue regeneration and wound-healing applications.
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Hedel, Nur Ezatull Fadtehah, and Mary Fatimah Subet. "Genre Perbualan Aneh dalam Hikayat Nakhoda Muda: Analisis Semantik Inkuisitif." LSP International Journal 8, no. 1 (June 22, 2021): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.11113/lspi.v8.16660.

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Oral and written traditions already existed a long time ago which are highlighted through various high value work. These works are processed as a medium to convey a words of advice, reprimand, satire and philosophy as a guide for the readers. The purpose of this study is to study the inquisitive semantics in strange conversational genre folklore. The objectives of this study are to identify utterances that display behaviors that were opposite to the norms of life and analyse the influence of culture and intelligence in folklore. This study is a qualitative study and an exploratory design by using a corpus data which is the Buku Antologi Enam Hikayat by choosing Hikayat Nakhoda Muda. The data were collected based on primary and secondary data and all the data were analysed based on three stages which is script semantics, resonans semantics and inquisitive semantics. Relevance Theory was used in this study. This study also includes the philosophy and intelligence of the previous society and the knowledge from other fields in order to get the concrete answer for every lexical that are used in the folklore. The results found that each lexical used in folklore has its own meaning and need to analyse by using inquisitive semantics analysis.
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SCHRAUF, ROBERT. "The bilingual emotion lexicon and emotion in vivo." Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 11, no. 2 (July 2008): 185–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1366728908003349.

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The keynote article by Aneta Pavlenko provides a compelling framework for the mental representation of emotion concepts in the two languages of the bilingual (novice or expert), and this may very well be its most telling contribution to the literature. However, I would like to concentrate my remarks on the author's development of the notion of emotionality in the latter third of the paper. I do this, first, because it seems to me that the majority of our work on the bilingual emotion lexicon derives from studies that have been done in the absence of actual emotional experience, and, second, because I believe that the author's development of the concept of emotionality sets the agenda for the next stage of research in this field.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Aneth field"

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Slaker, Brent Allan. "Double-Difference Tomography Applied to Monitoring of Geologic Carbon Sequestration in the Aneth Oil Field, Utah." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36316.

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Double-difference seismic tomography is performed on a carbon sequestration operation in the Aneth Oil Field in southeast Utah as part of a Department of Energy initiative on monitoring, verification, and accounting of sequestered CO2. A total of 1,211 seismic events were recorded from a borehole array of 22 geophones. Aneth Unit data were divided into four time periods for time-lapse analysis. A low velocity zone spanning the lateral extents of the observable region, likely representing a CO2 plume, is detected when considering voxels containing the highest ray path coverage. A series of synthetic tomography tests simulating different CO2 plume sizes and locations was performed to assist in characterizing velocity changes associated with Aneth Unit data. Inferences about the existence of a CO2 plume should be made by comparing actual data to synthetic data resulting from simulations performed under similar conditions. Considering synthetic simulation similarities and a derivative weight sum analysis, a CO2 plume can be imaged within the Desert Creek reservoir, but the resolution of the CO2 plume is too low for proper monitoring, verification, and accounting of injected CO2. Recommendations, for improving CO2 plume resolution through double difference seismic tomography, are made to increase the ray path distribution throughout the Aneth Unit by varying geophone locations.
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Slaker, Brent. "Double-Difference Tomography Applied to Monitoring of Geologic Carbon Sequestration in the Aneth Oil Field, Utah." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36316.

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Double-difference seismic tomography is performed on a carbon sequestration operation in the Aneth Oil Field in southeast Utah as part of a Department of Energy initiative on monitoring, verification, and accounting of sequestered CO2. A total of 1,211 seismic events were recorded from a borehole array of 22 geophones. Aneth Unit data were divided into four time periods for time-lapse analysis. A low velocity zone spanning the lateral extents of the observable region, likely representing a CO2 plume, is detected when considering voxels containing the highest ray path coverage. A series of synthetic tomography tests simulating different CO2 plume sizes and locations was performed to assist in characterizing velocity changes associated with Aneth Unit data. Inferences about the existence of a CO2 plume should be made by comparing actual data to synthetic data resulting from simulations performed under similar conditions. Considering synthetic simulation similarities and a derivative weight sum analysis, a CO2 plume can be imaged within the Desert Creek reservoir, but the resolution of the CO2 plume is too low for proper monitoring, verification, and accounting of injected CO2. Recommendations, for improving CO2 plume resolution through double difference seismic tomography, are made to increase the ray path distribution throughout the Aneth Unit by varying geophone locations.
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Goodrich, Colton Lynn. "Digital Outcrop Model and Paleoecology of the Eight-Foot Rapid Algal Field (Middle Pennsylvanian Lower Ismay Sequence), Paradox Basin, Utah." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2013. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3830.

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Although phylloid algal mounds have been studied for 50 year, much remains to be determined concerning the ecology and sedimentology of these Late Paleozoic carbonate buildups. Herein we perform a digital outcrop study of the well-known Middle Pennsylvanian Lower Ismay mound interval in the Paradox Basin because outcropping mounds along the San Juan River are cited as outcrop analogs of reservoir carbonates in the Paradox Basin oil province of Utah and adjacent states. The principal field area is the Eight Foot algal field located at river mile 19.2 on the San Juan River, approximately 14 miles SSW of Bluff, Utah. The Lower Ismay section is exposed on both sides of the river for 1.4 miles. Mechanisms for mound formation are still a heavily debated topic and even now aren't fully understood. While this study does not seek to solely answer this question, it does shed some light on the argument. A combined total station-LIDAR survey of the exposed Eight Foot mounds indicates that the mound field is comprised of 83 individual and composite mounds that have an average height of 10.9 meters and peak spacing of 48.8 meters. Further, statistical examination of survey data reveals a correlation between mound height and east-west alignment, showing that shelfward mounds were slightly taller than their more basinward counterparts.. However, other shape parameters do not appear to vary systematically across the algal field. Curve-fitting indicates that the overall mound morphology does not differ significantly from a Gaussian surface indicating that mounds are conical in shape. This suggests that mounds did not form under the influence of directional currents such as waves or tides. Yet, Ivanovia-fragment packstone and grainstone facies typical of the mound interval suggest a high-energy depositional setting.
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Gunnell, Evan R. "Lithofacies and Sequence Architecture of the Upper Desert Creek Sequence (Middle Pennsylvanian, Paradox Formation) in the Greater Aneth Field, Southern Paradox Basin, Utah." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2018. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/7055.

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The Greater Aneth Buildup (GAB) is comprised of the 3rd-order middle Pennsylvanian (Desmoinesian) Desert Creek sequence of the Paradox Formation. A hierarchy of 4th- and 5th order, carbonate-dominated cycles comprise the Upper Desert Creek (UDC) 4th-order sequence. A SE to NW trending transect line, utilizing core and petrophysical data from six oil and gas wells (from SE to NW wells R-19, Q-16, O-16, J-15, K-430, E-313), revealed deposition of seven carbonate facies within four 5th-order parasequences in the UDC. While each of the seven carbonate facies are present across the transect line, the UDC parasequences are dominated by a shallow-water oolite facies. Laterally and vertically, a general facies transition is evident in each of the four parasequences from a dominantly deeper-water succession of facies in the SE, to a more shallow-water, open marine to restricted lagoon, succession of facies to the NW. Parasequence UDC-3 contains the best representation of this facies transition with the SE wells (R-19, Q-16, and O-16) displaying the deeper-water/mixed algal facies grades into the shoaling oolite facies in the NW wells (J-15, K-430, and E-313). Within UDC strata, porosity and permeability correlate well to each other, but poorly to facies type. Porosity and permeability are predominantly controlled by diagenesis. Minor appearances of fibrous isopachus rim cements, and more common micritization (both whole grain and envelope) suggest that early-marine diagenesis occurred within the oolite facies. Meteoric diagenesis is demonstrated by abundant calcite spar, and drusy dogtooth cements within oomoldic pores, intraparticle pores, and interparticle pores, in addition to neomorphism of early marine diagenetic fabrics. Spastolithic ooids, stylolitization, and grain brecciation are representative of burial diagenesis within these strata. Dolomitization is present in each of the six studied core, but only in minor amounts. The Upper Desert Creek 3rd-order sequence has preserved laminamoldic diagenetic fabric that is the oldest known example of selective leaching in a meteoric vadose environment. Lithofacies trends along transect line A to A' demonstrate an increase in ooid-rich grainstone NSCF both vertically and laterally from the SE to the NW. Lithofacies type, combined with diagenesis, are the major drivers for porosity and permeability creation and destruction within Upper Desert Creek strata. NSCF, specifically ooid grainstones, have the greatest diagenetic potential of the seven UDC lithofacies.
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Perfili, Christopher M. "Lithofacies, Sequence Stratigraphy, and Sedimentology of Desert Creek Platform, Slope, and Basin Carbonates, Southern Margin of the Aneth Complex, Middle Pennsylvanian, Paradox Basin, Utah." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2020. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8741.

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The Aneth Field in the Paradox Basin (SE Utah) has produced nearly 500 MMbbls of oil from phylloid-algal and oolitic carbonate reservoirs of the lower and upper Desert Creek (Paradox Formation, Middle Pennsylvanian) sequences, respectively. The oil resides in a 150 to 200 foot-thick isolated carbonate platform located in a distal ramp setting on the southwest margin of the Paradox Basin. The horseshoe-shaped platform is roughly 12 miles in diameter with an aerial extent of approximately 144 square miles. Evaluation of the platform-to-basin transition on the leeward (southern) margin of the Aneth Platform, the focus of this study, was made possible through Resolute Energy's 2017 donation of well data and core to the Utah Geological Survey Core Research Center. The lower Desert Creek sequence ranges from 50 to 100 feet in thickness and produces from a succession of phylloid-algal, boundstone-capped parasequences in the Aneth Platform. The upper Desert Creek sequence is generally thinner across the platform and is characterized by a succession of oolite-capped parasequences, except on the southern margin of the platform where it ranges from 80 to 115 feet in thickness. The upper Desert Creek “thick” resulted from southward shedding of platform-derived carbonate sediment and lesser amounts of quartz silt and very fine sand off the low-angle southern platform margin slope. A nine-mile-long, north-south-oriented stratigraphic panel constructed from log and core data permits characterization of thickness and facies trends through the upper Desert Creek from platform (north) to slope to distal basin (south) in the Ratherford unit. In the southern margin, five novel facies for the Aneth Field were analyzed, described, and interpreted using a sequence stratigraphic framework, all of which represent deposition on a gravity-influenced platform-edge slope. It is interpreted that the slope facies association was deposited during transgression and highstand and was generally a result of oversteepened slopes as a function of the carbonate factory on the platform being highly productive. Slope and basin facies range from proximal rudstone and floatstone to thin, graded distal turbidites, the latter of which extend at least five miles into the basin. Compaction of the muddy and fine-grained allochthonous sediment followed by pervasive calcite and anhydrite cementation has destroyed any primary porosity in the platform-derived slope-to-basin sediments.
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Books on the topic "Aneth field"

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Spangler, Lawrence E. Hydrology, chemical quality, and characterization of salinity in the Navajo aquifer in and near the Greater Aneth Oil Field, San Juan County, Utah. Salt Lake City, Utah: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1996.

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The gothic shale of the Pennsylvanian Paradox Formation, Greater Aneth field (Aneth unit), southeastern Utah - seal for hydrocarbons and carbon dioxide. Utah Geological Survey, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.34191/mp-17-1.

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Records of wells in sandstone and alluvial aquifers and chemical data for water from selected wells in the Navajo aquifer in the vicinity of the Greater Aneth Oil Field, San Juan County, Utah. Salt Lake City, Utah: U.S. Geological Survey, 1992.

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Handle with Care: Ownership And Control Of Ethnographic Materials (Pitt Assn Soc Anth Oceanic). University of Pittsburgh Press, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Aneth field"

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BEST, DONALD A., FRANK M. WRIGHT, RAJIV SAGAR, and L. JAMES WEBER. "CONTRIBUTION OF OUTCROP DATA TO IMPROVE UNDERSTANDING OF FIELD PERFORMANCE: ROCK EXPOSURES AT EIGHT FOOT RAPIDS TIED TO THE ANETH FIELD." In Hydrocarbon Reservoir Characterization, 31–50. SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.2110/scn.95.34.0031.

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WEBER, L. JAMES, J. F. (RICK) SARG, and FRANK M. WRIGHT. "SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY AND RESERVOIR DELINEATION OF THE MIDDLE PENNSYLVANIAN (DESMOINESIAN), PARADOX BASIN AND ANETH FIELD, SOUTHWESTERN USA." In Milankovitch Sea-level Changes, Cycles, and Reservoirs on Carbonate Platforms in Greenhouse and Ice-House Worlds, 1–81. SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.2110/scn.95.35.0001c.

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WEBER, L. JAMES, FRANK M. WRIGHT, J. F. (RICK) SARG, ED SHAW, LESLIE P. HARMAN, JIM B. VANDERHILL, and DON A. BEST. "RESERVOIR DELINEATION AND PERFORMANCE: APPLICATION OF SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY AND INTEGRATION OF PETROPHYSICS AND ENGINEERING DATA, ANETH FIELD, SOUTHEAST UTAH, U.S.A." In Hydrocarbon Reservoir Characterization, 1–29. SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.2110/scn.95.34.0001.

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Conference papers on the topic "Aneth field"

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Amateis, L. J. "Application of Sequence Stratigraphic Modeling to Integrated Reservoir Management at Aneth Unit, Greater Aneth Field, Utah." In SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/30534-ms.

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Vanden Berg, Michael D., Thomas C. Chidsey, Peter Nielsen, and Jason Burris. "INTRODUCING THE LARGEST SINGLE OIL FIELD (GREATER ANETH, SOUTHEASTERN UTAH) COLLECTION OF CARBONATE CORES IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS— TOOLS FOR EDUCATION AND RESEARCH." In GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017. Geological Society of America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2017am-298280.

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Reports on the topic "Aneth field"

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Heath, Jason E., Thomas Dewers, Thomas C. Chidsey, Stephanie M. Carney, and S. R. Bereskin. The Gothic shale of the Pennsylvanian Paradox Formation Greater Aneth Field (Aneth Unit) Southeastern Utah U.S.A.: Seal for Hydrocarbons and Carbon Dioxide Storage. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1367407.

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Hydrology, chemical quality, and characterization of salinity in the Navajo Aquifer in and near the Greater Aneth Oil Field, San Juan County, Utah. US Geological Survey, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/wri964155.

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