Potential Shale-Oil Reservoirs in the Eastern Bighorn Basin, Wyoming
Abstract
The identification of new oil-producing shale reservoirs can be facilitated
through the application of full 3-D petroleum system modeling. This study
presents the results of a full, 3-D petroleum system model of the Bighorn
Basin, north-central Wyoming, and the identification of potential shale oil
reservoirs that are currently not being produced. Multiple data types were
obtained and integrated into a single, large-scale 3-D model which was used in
the petroleum systems simulation. Calibration was then performed to improve
modeling results. This study was performed in five phases – 1) 3-D structural
framework construction, 2) geochemical data integration, 3) preliminary 1-D
simulations, 4) 3-D predictive model simulation and 5) calibration.
Previously studies utilized
1-D
petroleum models which are limited
geographically. This study utilized advanced 3-D modeling techniques to
simulate the basin’s geologic history from the Precambrian to present day.
Results indicate that the Permian petroleum system has a high degree of
thermal maturity, however, the drill depth to these formations make them
currently uneconomic for development. The model indicates that the Lower
Cretaceous formations also have a high degree of thermal maturity and the
thermal maturity decreases upwards into the Upper Cretaceous formations.
Based on the structural framework developed as input for the modeling
process and the calibrated thermal-maturity results, the base of the marine
Cody Shale and the upper portion of the marine Frontier formation, which
includes shales, have been determined to be within the oil generation window
and economic drill depths in the eastern Bighorn Basin.
AAPG Datapages/Search and Discovery Article #90357 ©2019 AAPG Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Cheyenne, Wyoming, September 15-18, 2019