Journal of the Japanese Association for Petroleum Technology
Online ISSN : 1881-4131
Print ISSN : 0370-9868
ISSN-L : 0370-9868
Volume 24, Issue 2
Displaying 1-6 of 6 articles from this issue
  • Sunao OGOSE
    1959 Volume 24 Issue 2 Pages 29-38
    Published: March 30, 1959
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Defferent opinions concerning the geological age and correlation of the Cenozoic strata developed on the Bôsô and Miura Peninsulas, South Kantô, Japan, have hitherto been expres-sed by many Japanese geologists and paleontologists.
    The Cenozoic strata developed on the B ôs ô and Miura Peninsulas are divided lithologically into two groups, the lower, the Miura, and the upper, the Narita.
    In the present paper, the writer deals with some problems concerning the geological age and correlation of the Miura group.
    1) From the viewpoint of the Molluscan faunistic sequence, the Takoegawa sandstone and conglo-merate and Zusi mudstone on the Miura Peninsula may safely be correlated to the Mane mudstone, Motona sandstone and conglomerate, Siroiwa alternation and Kiyosumi sandstone on the B ôs ô Penin-sula, and the Kanazawa superformaton on the Miura Peninsula may be correlated to the Seki subgroup on the B ôs ô Peninsula.
    2) No incontrovertible direct paleontologic evidence is yet known, however, the approximate position of the Miocene-Pliocene boundary in the Bôsô and Miura Peninsulas can be determined by the biochronologic analysis of the Molluscan fossils collected from var;ous horizons in the Miura group.
    According to the recent opinion of K. HATAI, the Miocene-Pliocene boundary in the Bôsô Penin-sula corresponds with the so-called “Kurotaki unconformity” placed at the base of the Kurotaki formation and its correlatives. However, the writer is inclined to consider that this boundary in the Bôsô Peninsula is possibly placed below the Kiyosumi sandstone and its correlatives from which the so-called Dainiti-type Molluscans are collected. In the Miura Peninsula, the Takoegawa sand-stone and conglomerate and Zusi mudstone may be considered as ranging from the Upper Miocene up to the Lower Pliocene. Therefore, no major stratigraphic break is found near the transition stage from Miocene to Pliocene time throughout the B6s6 and Miura Peninsulas.
    3) The position of the Pliocene-Pleistocene boundary in the B ôs ô and Miura Peninsulas is currently one of the most controversial problems in Japanese Cenozoic stratigraphy.
    Although a great number of marine Molluscan fossils have been found in various horizons of the Pliocene and Pleistocene strata in the Bôsô and Miura Peninsulas, it is extremely difficult to determine where the Pliocene-Pleistocene boundary is, and opinions are still conflicting with one another on this problem.
    According to the writer's opinion, however, the Ôtadai alternation of sandstone and mudstone Umegase sandstone and alternation of sandstone and mudstone and their correlatives in the Bôsô Peninsula as well as the Kosiba tuffaceous sand in the Miura Peninsula may be considered to be Lower Pleistocene. The percentages of the living species of Molluscan fossils collected from these formations show tolerably high values.
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  • Kiyomitsu FUJII
    1959 Volume 24 Issue 2 Pages 39-42
    Published: March 30, 1959
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
  • Seiichi HIRAKAWA
    1959 Volume 24 Issue 2 Pages 43-47
    Published: March 30, 1959
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    In this paper are discussed the evaluation of gas-in-place and production behaviors in natural gas reservoir of free gas type, and the properties of gas reservoir fluids such as gas converesion factor, solubility and water formation volume factor. These discussion are chiefly based upon the calculated results which were computed under pre-determined conditions, In these calcu-lation are involved the encroachment effect of water into the gas reservoir and the evolution effect of natural gas from liquid phase within the reservoir.
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  • [in Japanese]
    1959 Volume 24 Issue 2 Pages 48-54
    Published: March 30, 1959
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • [in Japanese]
    1959 Volume 24 Issue 2 Pages 55-62
    Published: March 30, 1959
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (726K)
  • [in Japanese]
    1959 Volume 24 Issue 2 Pages 63-69
    Published: March 30, 1959
    Released on J-STAGE: June 30, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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