--> Abstract: Fluid Leakage Classification and Analysis in the SW Barents Sea, by Stefan Buenz, Sunil Vadakkepuliyambatta, and Juergen Mienert; #90130 (2011)
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Previous HitFluidNext Hit Leakage Classification and Analysis in the SW Barents Sea

Stefan Buenz, Sunil Vadakkepuliyambatta, and Juergen Mienert
Department of Geology, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway.

The vertical Previous HitflowNext Hit of fluids through marine sediments is a widespread and dynamic geological process that occurs on passive and active continental margins worldwide. Previous HitFluidNext Hit leakage is associated with excess pore-Previous HitfluidNext Hit pressure and attributed to temporally and spatially varying processes such as rapid sediment loading, uplift and erosion, dissociation of gas hydrate, polygonal faulting and hydrocarbon generation and leakage from deep and shallow reservoirs. The SW-Barents Sea is a part of Arctic Ocean located north of Norway. The occurrence of shallow gas, gas hydrates and seafloor expulsion features is reported from several areas of the SW Barents Sea. Leakage of fluids into the shallow sediments and into the ocean through the seafloor was probably the result of the profound Cenozoic erosion of the Barents Sea shelf during various glaciations. The Previous HitflowNext Hit of these fluids through marine sediments may have controlled the evolution of the various sedimentary basins of this region. For a better understanding of the Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowNext Hit features, their timing and origin, we here analyze approximately 3000 2D seismic profiles from different basins of the SW Barents Sea to identify different features of Previous HitfluidNext Hit leakage, classify them and study their relation to the structural elements and geological history of the SW Barents Sea.

We analyzed 2D seismic data from different basins of the SW Barents Sea to identify different Previous HitfluidNext Hit-Previous HitflowNext Hit features, classify them and study their relation to structural elements and geological history of SW Barents Sea. Most of the identified features fall in the category of gas chimneys and leakage through faults and fractures. Several complex Previous HitfluidNext Hit-Previous HitflowNext Hit features, a combination of chimneys and faults, were quite common suggesting a relation between the occurrence of faults and Previous HitfluidNext Hit leakage. Among the various observed Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowNext Hit features were: giant gas chimneys covering large areas, vertical blow-out pipes, pockmarks, buried collapse structures, Previous HitfluidNext Hit leakage along polygonal faults, sediment mobilization and Previous HitfluidNext Hit leakage, and high amplitude anomalies due to the trapped fluids. The Previous HitfluidNext Hit leakage features show good relation to the structural setting of the SW Barents Sea. Most of the Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowNext Hit features coincide with major faults in the SW Barents Sea suggesting a relation between Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowNext Hit and deep seated faults and indicate leakage from Jurassic and older formations. The number of Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowNext Hit features in the western part of the study area was significantly higher than the eastern part. Since they are related to the structural elements in the region, the tectonic activity and glacial cycles would have significantly affected the hydrocarbon accumulation and migration. The amount of erosion in the area is found to have no direct relation to the distribution of Previous HitfluidNext Hit Previous HitflowTop features.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90130©2011 3P Arctic, The Polar Petroleum Potential Conference & Exhibition, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, 30 August-2 September, 2011.

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