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Surface and Subsurface Expressions of Shallow Gas Accumulations in the Southern North Sea*
By
Barthold M. Schroot1
Search and Discovery Article #40090 (2003)
*“Extended” abstract of presentation at AAPG Hedberg Conference, “Near-Surface Hydrocarbon Migration: Mechanisms and Seepage Rates,” April 7-10, 2002, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
1Netherlands Institute of Applied Geoscience TNO, PO Box 80015, 3508 TA Utrecht, the Netherlands ([email protected])
Expressions of shallow gas, either in accumulations or apparently leaking to the
near-surface, can be found on 3D
seismic
surveys as well as on very high
frequency acoustic
data
. A number of different types of
seismic
anomalies
related to leakage have been distinguished in the Netherlands part of the
southern North Sea basin. A hypothesis in terms of migration mechanisms is given
to explain the different appearances of different gas-chimneys.
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uShallow gas, southern North Sea tFault related amplitude anomalies
uShallow gas, southern North Sea tFault related amplitude anomalies
uShallow gas, southern North Sea tFault related amplitude anomalies
uShallow gas, southern North Sea tFault related amplitude anomalies
uShallow gas, southern North Sea tFault related amplitude anomalies
uShallow gas, southern North Sea tFault related amplitude anomalies
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Within the scope of the EU sponsored NASCENT project, several
European on-and offshore gas occurrences are being studied from a CO2
storage perspective. The different study sites in
Europe have been selected
because they represent natural analogues for the geological storage of
CO2. Some of the cases under study in the project are “closed
systems”, where CO2
is apparently
efficiently trapped and sealed in a setting very similar to that of
hydrocarbon accumulations. At these sites information can be obtained
about the conditions under which CO2
can be effectively kept underground at a geological time scale. On
the other hand, some other sites in the project represent “open
systems,” where seepage and leakage to the surface and the near-surface
environment can be observed and studied. The shallow gas which is
abundantly present in the
Southern North Sea – albeit
probably mostly of CH4
composition – provides such a natural analogue for trapping, and
migration and seepage mechanisms. Standard E and P 3D Shallow Gas in the Southern North Sea Expressions of gas on
Expressions of
Shallow Gas on VHF Morphological surface expressions related to the venting of gas
include pockmarks. These are rimmed circular depressions, which in the
North Sea are normally 10-300 m in diameter and up to 15 m deep (McQuillin
and Fannin, 1979). They are thought to be created by either sudden and
enigmatic or periodical or semi-continuous escape of gas. They can be
detected on (side-scan) sonar or on very high frequency (VHF) acoustic
Very high frequency (VHF) acoustic measurements, such as 3.5 kHz sub-bottom profiling, commonly show acoustic blanking in the southern North Sea. Especially single-frequency profilers show these expressions clearly. Their distribution, however, is highly variable. In some concession blocks, these gas-related phenomena are virtually absent, whereas in other blocks (e.g., in block F3 [Figures 1, 3]) they may affect up to 50% of the records. Acoustic blanking, and to a lesser extent acoustic turbidity, are locally very common in channel-fill settings (in the northern part of the Dutch offshore in particular), but they also occur underneath or within clay caps and seabed muds. Acoustic blanking appears as patches where reflections are faint or absent. These may result from the disruption of sediment layering by the migration of pore fluids or gas, or alternatively may be caused by the absorption of acoustic energy in overlying gas-charged sediments. It may also be caused by the reflection of a high portion of the acoustic energy by an overlying hard sediment; the reduction in the amount of energy penetrating the hard layer being represented by a relatively low amplitude return signal (Judd and Hovland, 1992).
It has been demonstrated that standard 3D
Gas chimneys are vertical disturbances in
Figure 3 shows a “chimney” we have found in a 3D survey covering
parts of blocks F3 and F6 (Figure 1). It is visible both on the
vertical sections and on time-slices, and is related to a fault running
from an associated underlying salt dome up to the seabed. Associated are
bright spots at Upper Pliocene levels, immediately underneath the
chimney. This chimney is focused by increased Our hypothesis is that the local increase in amplitudes, and the
preservation of Our example more nearly resembles the gas chimney over the Machar salt dome in the Central North Sea (UK quadrant 23) presented by Thrasher et al. (1996). They interpreted the Machar dome chimney to represent smaller and focused seepage. With respect to the migration mechanism in case of the Machar dome, Thrasher et al. (1996) comment that overpressure in the Machar reservoir is insufficient for fluid induced fracturing, and that therefore the primary leakage mechanism must have been capillary failure of the top seal.
Many 2D
Shallow disturbed zones of
Fault related amplitude anomalies Seepage of gases or fluids can be interpreted right over salt
domes. Some extensional faults related to the salt structure are
providing the migration path up to the seabed. Relatively small patches
of high
Time-slices from 3D
Indications for shallow gas in the Netherlands North Sea show that
numerous gas-related phenomena occur. Apart from bright spots, which
indicate gas accumulations that are efficiently trapped and sealed in
shallow reservoirs, there is a range of other features pointing at
leakage and migration of gas to the seabed. There is indirect evidence
for actual gas venting; e.g., by the observation of pockmarks. There
also appear to be more cases of gas-induced carbonate-cemented sediments
than previously thought. From our observations we conclude that many of
the The observed high amplitudes within the gas chimney can be explained by gas saturation of the more porous layers in the shallow sequence, but an alternative explanation would be carbonate cementation caused by the methane passing through. In either gas, we still observe preservation of sedimentary bedding within the chimney, phenomena which would be in contrast with other possible style of chimneys where the migration mechanism would have been more destructive.
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