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Elements of Petroleum Geology

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English

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Book Description

This Second Edition of Elements of Petroleum Geology is completely updated and revised to reflect the vast changes in the field in the fifteen years since publication of the First Edition. This book is a usefulprimer for geophysicists, geologists, and petroleum engineers in the oil industry who wish to expand their knowledge beyond their specialized area. It is also an excellent introductory text for a university course in petroleum geoscience.
Elements of Petroleum Geology begins with an account of the physical and chemical properties of petroleum, reviewing methods of petroleum exploration and production. These methods include drilling, geophysical exploration techniques, wireline logging, and subsurface geological mapping. After describing the temperatures and pressures of the subsurface environment and the hydrodynamics of connate fluids, Selley examines the generation and migration of petroleum, reservoir rocks and trapping mechanisms, and the habit of petroleum in sedimentary basins. The book contains an account of the composition and formation of tar sands and oil shales, and concludes with a brief review of prospect risk analysis, reserve estimation, and other economic topics.

* Updates the First Edition completely
* Reviews the concepts and methodology of petroleum exploration and production
* Written by a preeminent petroleum geologist and sedimentologist with 30 years of petroleum exploration in remote corners of the world
* Contains information pertinent to geophysicists, geologists, and petroleum reservoir engineers

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Richard Selley

Professor Richard Selley is one of the world's foremost authorities on the application of geology to petroleum exploration and production. He spent several years working for oil companies in Libya and Greenland, and was a member of Conoco's exploration team which discovered the Lyell, Murchison and Hutton fields in the North Sea. After graduating from Kingston, he was accepted as a research student at Imperial College London, rising to Head of Geology, and has spent much of his career there. Richard has published more than 70 papers and many books, and has provided consultancy in a wide range of countries, including Australia, the USA, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Indonesia and Vietnam. He was awarded the Murchison Fund (1975), the Petroleum Group Silver Medal (2003) and the Coke Medal (2010) of the Geological Society of London; has been a Distinguished Lecturer of the Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia; received a Certificate of Merit from the American Association of Petroleum Geologists; and was a Visiting Research Fellow at the Natural History Museum. He is an Honorary Member of the Petroleum Exploration Society of Great Britain, and has served on its council, in addition to those of the Geologists' Association, the European Federation of Geologists, and the Geological Society of London. Richard has also applied his geological knowledge to viticulture. He identified the chalk of the North Downs at Dorking in Surrey as ideal for a vineyard, and Denbies is now one of the largest vineyards in Europe, famous for its prize-winning wines. He has also mapped the impact of past and future climate change on UK vineyards.

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