--> Abstract: Natural Gases as Tracers of Dynamic Processes in the Subsurface, by Martin Schoell; #90948 (1996).

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Abstract: Natural Gases as Tracers of Dynamic Processes in the Subsurface

Martin Schoell

Natural gases can be ubiquitously detected in the subsurface, either as traces in sediments or as accumulations in oil and gas reservoirs. Hydrocarbon gases form through bacterial and thermogenic conversion of organic matter over extended geological time. The higher molecular compounds in gases (ethane, propane, and butane or C2+ hydrocarbons) tend to be retained in the rock fabric during migration from source to reservoir (migration fractionation) so that natural gases become enriched in methane in the reservoir. Isotopic properties of methane and C2+ hydrocarbons are controlled by temperature-dependent kinetic fractionation during maturation and mixing during migration in reservoirs.

Gas fields are actively and repeatedly charged over extended periods of gas formation (episodic migration) during which gases change isotopically. Isotopic signatures of gases are, therefore, sensitive tracers for the filling histories of oil and gas fields and the dynamic processes that drive episodic migration of oils and gases, a ubiquitous phenomenon observed in small and giant gas fields throughout the world.

Gulf of Mexico: The Gulf of Mexico is a unique natural laboratory for the study of natural gas formation and migration. The dynamics of salt removal and formation of mini-basins with high sedimentation rates play together in the formation of bacterial and thermogenic gases. Pervasive mixing of bacterial and multiple episodes of thermogenic gas charges results in large variations in isotopic signatures on a field and reservoir scale. Bacterial gases form in mini-basins and are migrating against rising salt structures and active growth faults. Different episodes of thermogenic gas charges can be identified from C2+ isotope variations. Variations in isotopic signatures in one field often change from reservoir to reservoir as a result of different mixing ratios of bacterial and thermogenic gases.

Angola: Giant oil fields offshore Cabinda contain thermogenic gases with different isotopic signatures in the gas cap and the oil leg, indicating a multiphased migration of thermogenic gases from mature to post-mature sources. The giant oil fields form in several migration episodes whereby late charges of deep post-mature gases displace oils.

Papua New Guinea: Variations of isotopic signatures of gases in the Kutubu area of the Papuan fold belt can be related to structural compartments of fields. Migration and remigration can be traced through the compositional changes in gases.

Yacheng Gas Field: Gas composition and isotopic signatures of methane change from west to east in this giant field in the South China Sea. Inert gas contents also vary vertically in the reservoir, suggesting a late charge of a CO2 rich gas into the structure.

South Italy: Pliocene reservoirs in the Apulian Basin are mixtures of thermogenic and bacterial gases. Carbon isotope signatures of methane and nitrogen contents are direct tracers for the thermogenic component in the gas mixtures. Gas composition variations within single reservoir sands suggest a two-phase filling of the reservoirs.

These worldwide observations help us to appreciate for oil and gas migration, what is commonplace for hydrothermal systems; i.e., that sedimentary basins release fluids in a pulsating dynamic fashion, ever changing in composition and filling reservoirs with complex mixtures that reflect deep processes in the basin. With this insight into the dynamic nature of reservoir filling processes we will be able to use our geochemical data with more confidence for reservoir applications.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90948©1996-1997 AAPG Distinguished Lecturers