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New Deep Basin Gas Plays at Hooker, Alberta - Extending Deep Basin Prospectivity Southward*
By
Brad J.R. Hayes1, Marc Junghans2, Kim Davies2, and Murray Stodalka2
Search and Discovery Article #10051 (2003)
*Adapted from “extended abstract” for presentation at the AAPG Annual Meeting, Salt Lake City, Utah, May 11-14, 2003. A companion paper, “The Deep Basin - A Hot ‘‘Tight Gas’’ Play for 25 Years,” by the senior author, is also posted on Search and Discovery.
1Petrel Robertson Consulting Ltd., Calgary, Alberta ([email protected])
2Compton Petroleum Corporation, Calgary, Alberta ([email protected])
Introduction
The Deep Basin of western Canada was originally described as a huge, crescent-shaped wedge of hydrocarbon-saturated reservoirs flanking the Rocky Mountain Foothills. Although early workers recognized it stretching from the Montana border to northeastern British Columbia, initial exploration work focused in the north, stepping out from giant discoveries at Elmworth. To the south, many Deep Basin plays in west-central Alberta were pursued as conventional targets, as operators did not recognize the characteristics of pervasive hydrocarbon saturation and anomalous reservoir pressures. In southern Alberta, Deep Basin plays were essentially ignored.
Recently, however,
exploration momentum has moved southward with the establishment of a new Deep
Basin play in the Lower Cretaceous Basal
Quartz
sandstone at Hooker, in southern
Alberta.
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Hooker Play History
Hooker’s exploration history began in the 1960’s, when the first
discoveries of gas were made in Basal
Following Spence’s work, Compton Petroleum identified an extensive Basal
Hooker Development
Today, the Hooker development area covers about three townships, out of
a prospective area of up to nine townships (Figure 1). Compton and
others have drilled 83 wells, of which 61 are producing gas wells, 10
are awaiting tie-in, and seven are suspended on facilities constraints.
Compton has booked 161 BCF of gas reserves (as of year-end 2001), which
probably represents about 70% of the total for all operators established
to date. The Basal
The Hooker Basal The Deep Basin at Hooker
Although Hooker occurs within the same Basal
Twenty-five kilometers north of the main Hooker development, Compton is
testing the updip boundary of the Deep Basin with wells in Townships 19
and 20 (Figure 1). There are no unique structural or stratigraphic
features to define the boundary, although northward erosion of
underlying Jurassic marine shales exposes the Basal Downdip, the first and deepest well in the play (10-10-14-1W5) flowed 500 MCF/D after frac, with no water production, from a depth of 3490 meters. As is typically the case for Deep Basin plays, the downdip limit will be economic permeability values, not water.
Future Potential
The Basal
In addition, operators are now beginning to identify uphole zones at
Hooker which may add substantially to the gas resource base. It is only
reasonable to speculate that there will be substantial Deep Basin gas in
the 3000-meter clastic section overlying the Basal Hooker has put the Deep Basin back on the exploration map in southern Alberta. |
