Transient-Pooled Natural Gas Systems in the Rocky Mountain Basins
Schamel, Steven1 (1) GeoX Consulting Inc, Salt Lake City, UT
The conundrum of conventional versus unconventional natural
gas in “tight” sandstone reservoirs is merely a function of scale in time
and
space. Where the reservoir unit is relatively continuous spatially and sealed by
a high-quality, and equally continuous, cap rock, we recognize a clear gas-water
contact and other features of a conventional gas pool. However, in the Rocky
Mountain and other basins where the stratigraphic succession is heterogeneous
and the reservoir sandstones are discontinuous, as in fluviodeltaic successions,
the gas pools are small, disconnected and highly transient. Such gas pools exist
only because the rate of gas escape through the imperfect local topseal is
balanced by the entry of gas from below. In relatively short timeframes, on the
order of a few millions of years or less, transient-pooled natural gas systems
depend on the continuous generation and/or release of gas from an intercalated
or deeper source. These systems merely inhibit and
delay
the flow of gas as it
migrates from its source to the surface, which on a basin-scale creates the
impression of a continuous cloud of gas, a continuous-type basin-centered gas
resource. The Rocky Mountain basins have lost as much as 10,000 ft of sediment
cover due to late Neogene-Recent erosion. Whereas the unloading has slowed the
rates of deep gas generation, the reduction in ambient pressure has released
very large volumes of free natural gas through dissolution from connate waters
and desorption from coals and dispersed kerogen.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90055©2006 AAPG Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Billings, Montana