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Subsurface Fluid Compartments: Report*
By
D. E. Powley1
Search and Discovery Article #60006 (2006)
Posted March 14, 2006
*Adapted from Amoco Geological Research Report, December 30, 1984
1Amoco Production Company, retired, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74136
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Purpose, Summary, and Introduction The purpose of this report is to summarize progress made over the last few years in understanding the movement of subsurface fluids as interpreted from subsurface fluid pressures. During that time it was recognized that, in most of the deep basins in the world, there are at least two superimposed hydraulic systems. The shallowest hydraulic system generally extends from the surface down to about 9000-12,000 ft greatest historical depth of burial and typically exhibits normal pressures. The deeper hydraulic system generally consists of individual compartments which are sealed off from each other and from the overlying system. The pressures within the compartments in the deep hydraulic system are usually markedly overpressured or underpressured relative to the pressures in the overlying hydraulic system. In some basins there is a deeper, near normally pressured section. This report deals with the geological and exploration implications of fluid compartments. The study was conducted on an informal when-time-is-available basis and draws from experience derived from several limited-objective technical-service-type studies conducted for various Company locations. Also, literature and personal-communication data were collected on about 200 of the world’s nearly 500 basins. Intensive collection and review of data were concentrated on about 70 basins, over half of which are in North America. This report does not attempt to discuss each of those basins; it deals with the summation of observations and conclusions drawn from all of the basins studied. A seminar or slides on the data assembled pertinent to specific basins can be supplied if needed.
Conclusions1. There are so many basins with a layer of fluid compartments that the formation and preservation of compartments appear to be parts of normal basin development. 2. Seals bounding subsurface fluid compartments may trap or localize the entrapment of oil and gas. 3. Recognition and mapping of subsurface compartments mainly on the basis of pressure data are generally relatively easy and can become parts of the normal procedures used in development and assessment of exploration plays.
Prior StudiesThere have been three periods of innovative interpretations of subsurface pressures. The first was an amazingly perceptive study of the relationship of oil and gas pools to water density and water pressures in sand reservoirs in Rocky Mountains basins conducted in 1924 and 1925 by Clare Coffin, a geologist then with an Amoco predecessor company (Coffin, 1925). He introduced the concepts and mathematics of tracing water flow through subsurface formations from entry at high elevation outcrops to exits at lower elevation outcrops. He correctly pointed out that, while fresh water entering high outcrops may, on the basis of elevations of water inlet outcrops and water outlet outcrops alone, appear to have sufficient head to push heavier salty water from deep within basins, it actually selects the path of least resistance over the heavier brines and thus moves within individual permeable rock layers around the basins in the shallow basin-periphery rocks to lower outcrops or, in some cases, moves by sheet-like cross-formational flow in shallow rocks directly across basins. His study demonstrated that the reservoirs bearing degraded, low gravity oils in Rocky Mountains basins are in the near-surface rocks currently being swept by meteoric waters. His report also explains his technique for mapping meteoric water/heavy brines interfaces from elevations of outcrops, water densities, and water pressures. During the last several years, eastern European hydrogeologists have independently rediscovered Coffin’s concept of a thin, near-surface layer of moving, (or at least movable) meteoric water directly overlying dormant brines with seemingly continuously permeable rock connections between the dissimilarly behaving waters. The proceedings of the 1976 I.A.H.S. conference in Budapest provide interesting reading in that regard. The next period of interest in pressure indicators of underground fluid flow conditions was in the mid 1950’s when King Hubbert (Shell) and William Russell (Texas A&M University), working independently, presented mathematical explanations for the tilted oil/water interfaces observed in a few pools. The explanations involved rapid movement of the water in basal contact with the base of oil columns. Russell (1956) recognized that tilted contacts may be produced by stratigraphic variations; however, that cautionary note was lost in an almost competitive outpouring of literature and talks on tilted oil/water interfaces by those and other authors. Hubbert (1940, 1954), to a greater extent than others, displayed the misconception that each aquifer is independent of all other aquifers and the resultant misconception that aquifers in basins may be likened to U tubes in which fresh water enters at high elevation outcrops and proceeds directly across basins displacing heavy deep-basin brines rather than flowing over or around the brines. Hubbert became a distinguished lecturer for the American Association of Petroleum Geologists on interpretive tracing of water flows by the use of pressure data. He labeled his interpretation technique “hydrodynamics”. His lectures included a movie of an experiment using a large glass U tube with small kinks to represent an aquifer in a basin with anticlines. He flowed water and oil into the apparatus and showed that, by adjustment of flow velocities, (1) he could cause oil to collect at the tops of the upbend kinks, (2) at faster rates the oil would collect on the downflow direction sides of the kinks and (3) at greater water flow rates the oil would be swept out of the tubing along with the water. This demonstration caused a great deal of spectator interest. That interest led to the drilling of several downflank wildcat wells in attempts to find oil pools displaced from structure-crest positions by moving water. These wells were almost universally dry; in fact, this author is unaware of any significant oil or gas pools anywhere in the world which were deliberately found by application of hydrodynamics techniques. The concepts and mathematics have been convincingly used by proponents of the technique in explaining oil/water interface tilts in a few pools which were discovered on the basis of other, more conventional, exploration concepts and techniques. Despite its obvious failure to date as an oil and gas finding technique, Hubbert-type hydrodynamics still bears a charm to some people, probably because of its mathematical elegance. When
the pace of drilling revived after the 1957-1965 imports-induced
domestic drilling slump, many wells were taken to greater than usual
depths. Many of those deeper wells encountered higher-than-anticipated
subsurface pressures. In many basins it was recognized that the During the late 1960’s and 1970’s, simultaneously with the interest in the origin of abnormal pressures, geochemists were collecting data and developing concepts which placed the depth of thermochemical generation of petroleum in the general 10,000 to 16,000 ft range in low-in-kerogen-associated-sulfur rocks in many basins. That depth range places the generation of much oil and gas within or, in a few basins, below abnormally pressured rocks in many geologically young basins. Presumably, similar generation depth-pressure relationships existed earlier in many old basins. Thus, the geochemists have pointed out that we must know more about pressures than merely origins of abnormal pressures if we are to effectively trace petroleum from its source rocks to its sites of current entrapment.
Figures 1-16
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TextInasmuch as there may be a wide range of reader prior knowledge regarding subsurface fluid pressures, this section is included to accommodate those with limited experience. More experienced readers may find it convenient to proceed directly from here to the next section. Readers desiring more illustrations of the basic concepts of subsurface pressures are referred to Amoco Geological Research Report M76-G-16 (Powley, 1976). Pressure is the force per unit area which fluids (liquids and gases) exert on the surface of any solid which they contact. Pressure exists at every point in a fluid at rest. The magnitude of the pressure is proportional to the depth below the surface; i.e., the pressure is the same at all points at the same level within a single fluid at rest. Also, the pressure at any depth is proportional to the density of the fluid (Figure 1). The pressure in a fluid at rest is independent of the shape of the containing vessel and is the same whether the vessel contains a fluid only or contains a fluid and a quantity of solids in grain-to-grain contact; i.e., not a suspension. Thus, in the earth, the pressure in a subsurface fluid is independent of the shape and size of the rock pores but is dependent upon the density of the fluid and upon the depth below its surface (Figure 2). In the
earth, the datum water surface usually cannot be seen. However, pressure
calculations commonly indicate that the rock pores are fluid-filled and
interconnected from the The pressure previously discussed is that caused by the weight of a free-standing fluid column without any external pressure being applied. If any external pressure is applied to any confined fluid .at rest, the pressure at every point within the fluid is increased by the amount of the external pressure. This statement is known as Pascal’s Principle, after the French philosopher who first clearly expressed it. An example of a confined fluid is the fluid below a piston in a closed cylinder. The pressure in the fluid increases as external pressure is applied and returns to normal when the pressure is removed. Within the confined fluid, the rate of increase in pressure downward is the same with or without an external pressure (Figure 3). In
geology, the counterpart to the piston and cylinder walls previously
shown is any combination of rock layers and interfaces which completely
enclose a body of fluid-bearing rock in a low-permeability envelope. The
low-permeability envelope is usually referred to as a The
Keyes Field in northwestern Oklahoma is illustrative of the case in
which the rock matrix at the base of each of the two Pressures which are less than can be attributed to a free-standing water column to the surface were termed underpressures during the discussion of the Keyes Field. Likewise, pressures which are greater than can be attributed to a free-standing water column to the surface are termed overpressures. Underpressures and overpressures together comprise the well-known classification, abnormal pressures (Figure 8). Overpressures develop when there is an excess of pore fluids over available pore space. The state of volume imbalance may be due to pore space shrinkage or to pore fluid expansion (Figure 9). Most of the origins suggested in the geological literature involve pore space reduction by extensive mechanical collapse of the rock matrix under conditions of increased depth of burial. The rock collapse theories may be applicable in regions of very incompetent rock, like the shallow gumbo shales in the North Sea Basin, but are not acceptable in regions of competent rock like the Uinta, Green River, and Anadarko basins, the Grand Banks, the basal Jurassic sands in Mississippi, and the clastics in much of the Gulf Coast Basin. For instance, laboratory “rock squeezing” experiments on overpressured Gulf Coast shales indicate that those shales have many of the strength characteristics of limestone; hardly a low strength material (Figure 10). The first widely acceptable origin for most of the abnormal pressures encountered in wells was suggested by Barker in 1972, and expanded upon by Bradley in 1973, 1975, and 1976. It involves creation of overpressures by thermal expansion of pore fluids as pore fluids become warmer under conditions of deeper burial and creation of underpressures by thermal contraction of pore fluids resultant mainly from removal of cover by erosion. The Barker-Bradley proposal is based on considering a sealed rock body to be an essentially constant-volume vessel similar to a high-pressure boiler. As the temperature of a constrained volume of fresh water is increased, the pressure will increase at about 125 psi/oF of temperature change. Pressure in a saturated brine will change approximately 110 psi/oF of temperature change under the same conditions. If these conditions are applied to a geological model involving 1000 ft of increase in depth of burial, moderately salty water in a confined rock body and a geothermal gradient of 1.75°F/100 ft, the increase in pressure due to thermal expansion will be 2048 psi. If the
rate of subsurface pressure buildup is in the order of 2000 psi per each
1000 ft of additional burial, the pressures would quickly become
excessive and the confined fluids would burst through their It is
likely that pressure release by fracturing is localized at the
shallowest depth of burial of overpressured rock masses. For
illustration purposes, consider an overpressured rock mass at 15,000 ft
depth under a 200-ft-thick Large
reductions in pressure may be accomplished by the release of very small
quantities of water. To depressure a 1000-ft-thick rock body with 10%
porosity by 1000 psi requires the release of only 9.6/in3
water/in2 Most of the discussions to this point have dealt with pressures in individual wells or in local areas. When interpretations are extended from well to well over large areas, it is generally easier to deal in terms of potentiometric surfaces than with pressures in psi and pressure-depth ratios. A potentiometric surface is the elevation of the upper free surface of a fluid, generally at rest. In subsurface geology, the potentiometric surface for an aquifer is the elevation to which a free-standing fluid column of some specific density would rise if free to do so in a well penetrating only that aquifer. In normally pressured rocks the potentiometric surface of formation water corresponds to a “smoothed” topographic surface. In overpressured rocks, the potentiometric surface is above the topographic surface and in underpressured rocks the potentiometric surface is below the topographic surface. Calculations of potentiometric surfaces derived from elevations and measured pressures data are highly vulnerable to error if the fluid densities values used in the calculations do not correspond with the densities of the fluids in the aquifer. Figure 16 portrays calculations of a potentiometric surface applicable to the Basal Quartz formation in the Lanaway area of Alberta, Canada. Note that if a water density of 46 psi/100 ft is used, the calculated potentiometric surface is horizontal; however, if a fresh water density value (43.3 psi/100 ft) is used, the calculated potentiometric surface is markedly tilted. If a water density of greater than 46 psi/100 ft is used, the calculated potentiometric surface will be tilted in the opposite direction. Fortunately, selection of an appropriate water density for use in potentiometric surface calculations is usually quite easy. If carefully measured pressures in normally pressured formations at several depths in wells in a single basin are plotted against depth, the resultant profile in each basin usually portrays a strictly linear relationship. The pressure-depth ratio may be different from basin to basin, but within any single basin, the ratio usually is remarkably constant. This is apparently due to some equalization process in nature such that water salinity, water compressibility, water temperature, and work being done on the system jointly reach a vertical and horizontal equilibrium density balance in all normally pressured formations within each basin. For instance, a pressure-potentiometric head conversion factor of 45 psi/100 ft from the surface is applicable in normally pressured rocks at all depths in most Rocky Mountains basins and a 46.5 psi/100 ft pressure/depth ratio is similarly applicable in normally pressured rocks throughout the Gulf Coast Basin. The same factors may be used as interval gradient values in abnormally pressured sections in the same basins. For instance, the 46.5 psi/100 ft from the surface pressure-potentiometric head conversion value applicable to normally pressured rocks in the Gulf Coast Basin is identical to the 46.5 psi/100 ft interval gradient value applicable to the waters in the internal volumes in abnormally pressured formations in that basin. The reader should be cautious about uncritical application of the foregoing generalities to previously unstudied basins because there are a few isolated cases, most notably in the early Paleozoic formations in the Williston and Alberta basins, where the waters have not come into a basin-wide salinity-compressibility-temperature balance. During the 1950’s, an interpretive technique known as “hydrodynamic analysis” was widely applied, mainly by the Petroleum Research Corporation, a Denver based consulting company, in the Rocky Mountains states and in western Canada. The technique was based on the assumption that there is a component of fluid flow from all sites with high potentiometric surfaces to all sites with lower potentiometric surfaces within the same rock layer. The technique was developed into elegant mathematical derivations of the velocity of steady rate flow between pressure control sites. The velocity figures were commonly developed further to establish minimum rates of dip which would be required to retain oil and gas on structures. The principal shortcomings in the hydrodynamics rationale was the failure to recognize that there is a close vertical and horizontal interdependence of aquifers (as outlined in the foregoing paragraph) and the failure to recognize that water bodies laterally sealed off from each other in the same rock layer could have substantial differences in potentiometric surfaces and thus lateral differences in potentiometric surfaces could signify either flow or no flow. Also, nearly all of the early practitioners of the hydrodynamics art used fresh water densities in their calculations of potentiometric surfaces. Inasmuch as very few subsurface formations contain pure fresh water, almost all of the resultant maps were quite misreading. They, almost universally, portrayed tilted potentiometric surfaces and thus signified flow where, if appropriate water density values had been used, there usually would have been no indicated flow. The reader is advised to be wary of those early maps unless it can be determined that appropriate water densities were used. Return to Sources of Pressure Data
TextThe pressures in fluids in subsurface formations are generally determined by measurements within wellbores which have penetrated those formations. Well log data may also be combined with empirically derived relationships to derive reasonably reliable indicated subsurface pressures. The art of measuring shut-in pressures in wells is in good order, and there are a variety of reliable pressure measurement tools available. Inasmuch as those measurements are regularly conducted under the supervision of Company drilling engineers, many of whom are available for consultation by readers of this report, there seems to be no necessity for compiling a “how to” section in this report. Overpressures have been known and studied in the Gulf Coast Basin for many years. Most of the techniques to safely drill and complete wells in overpressured formations now in use worldwide were developed in the Gulf Coast. One of the most significant techniques is the use of well logs to identify and quantify overpressures. The techniques now in use are modified from those introduced in a paper presented by Hottman and Johnson in 1965. They reported the coincidence of high fluid pressures in sands and lower-than-normal electrical resistivities and acoustic velocities in adjacent shales in the Gulf Coast Basin. Figure 17 demonstrates the same relationship in the Uinta Basin. The technique using electrical logs involves an empirically derived relationship between the resistivity of shales adjacent to sands with fluids at normal pressures and the resistivity of shales adjacent to sands with overpressured fluids. The resistivity values for shales are generally easy to read on electrical logs (Figure 18). The ratios of the resistivity of the shales in the normally pressured section to the resistivity of the shales in the overpressured section are plotted on a ratio comparison chart which yields a pressure/depth ratio value applicable to the resistivity ratio (Figure 19). The resistivity relationship varies from basin to basin so a separate chart must be compiled for each basin. Electrical well logs do not respond to underpressures and do not respond to overpressures until a threshold pressure/depth ratio value of 61 psi/100 ft of burial depth is exceeded. The reader should follow through the example calculations on Figures 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, and 23 at this point to insure that the technique is understood. This example calculation is somewhat misleading inasmuch as the accuracy obtained is better than that which can be routinely derived from average quality well logs. The importance of the foregoing well log interpretation technique is that it is possible to construct pressure-depth profiles for overpressured sections without requiring downhole pressure measurements. Geologists are now able to know more about the pressures in overpressured rocks than they generally know about normally pressured or underpressured rocks. However, recent industry drilling practice involves using high salinity oil muds to dehydrate overpressured shales by osmosis, thus firming the borehole and allowing the shales to be drilled slightly underbalanced. The high salinity borehole fluids may render electrical logs almost useless for pressure quantification. Several authors have noted that abnormally high pressures are frequently accompanied by higher-than-normal geothermal gradients. Interval geothermal gradients in overpressured rocks in which pressure/depth ratios are greater than a threshold value of about 75 psi/l00 ft of burial depth usually are about 1.4 times as great as the geothermal gradients in rocks of similar lithology in which the pressure/depth ratios are less than about 75 psi/l00 ft (Figure 24). Geothermal gradients are much more difficult to work with than electrical logs because there usually are only a few temperature measurements in each well. Despite the frustrations of basing interpretations on skimpy temperature data, pressure/depth graphs derived from a combination of electrical log data and temperature data can be quite accurate. Hottman and Johnson (1965) contended that porosity in shale is abnormally high relative to its depth if the fluid pressure is abnormally high. That statement led to a flood of measurements of porosity and density of Gulf Coast shales. Amoco measured dry bulk densities and porosities in shale from drill cuttings and cores from nearly 30 million linear feet of borehole intervals in 4000 wells in the Gulf Coast Basin during the 1960’s. In 1966 Rogers described how profiles of the density of shales were then being used by some oil companies to identify overpressured shales and to estimate pressures in adjacent sands in wells in the Gulf Coast Basin. The prevailing belief was that the magnitudes of pressures may be determined by measuring the deviations of the densities of shales in overpressured rocks from a normal density-depth trend. Within a few years the technique was generally abandoned because drillers had developed more reliable indicators of overpressures in drilling wells and, more importantly, because it was discovered that overpressures occur in association with both normal density and low density shales. Low density shales were found to be universally overpressured but normal density shales could be overpressured, normally pressured, or underpressured. Research Department Report No. F82-G-23 deals more extensively with the relation between pressures and shale densities in the Gulf Coast Basin. Sonic
well logs and field seismic data may indicate overpressures by a
reduction in interval velocities and may indicate underpressures by an
increase in interval velocities relative to interval velocities in
normally pressured rocks of similar lithologies. There is no minimum
pressure/depth threshold value which must be exceeded for velocity
response. Thus, it might appear that sonic well logs would be more
valuable than electrical well logs in quantification of pressures;
however, sonic logs also respond to fractures,wellbore rugosity,
alteration of shale by wellbore fluids, and to changes in lithology,
particularly to the degree of mineralization. The response to fractures
may overwhelm the pressure effects to the extent that the first
discerned sonic log response at a normal pressure to overpressure
transition is at the
Geology of Abnormal PressuresFigures 25-26 Return to
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Figure 27. Diagrammatic cross-section of normal fault with
rollover and a lower overpressured section. Potential trap(s)
may lie within about one mile upward and horizontally from the
point of local shallowest depth of burial of |
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Figure 28. Cross-section and pressure/depth profile, Ship Shoal
Block 28 Field, offshore Louisiana, showing intervals of |
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Figure 29. Cross-section and pressure/depth profile, Alta Loma
Field, Galveston County, Texas, showing intervals of |
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The four most important recent developments in basin fluids concepts are (1) the recognition that there probably is much less lateral movement of pore fluids than was envisioned in the heyday of hydrodynamics, (2) the recognition that vertical migration of pore fluids is more prevalent than earlier recognized, (3) the recognition of the ubiquity of pressure compartments and their effects on the movement of all pore fluids and (4) underground hydraulic fracturing of rocks now appears to be an important fluids transport mechanism.
Combination of the foregoing concepts provides a speculative indication
of how petroleum starts its path from its source rocks towards its sites
of entrapment, providing oil and gas takes the same migratory path as
water. Currently popular geochemical concepts place the depth to
petroleum generating formations in many basins in the general 10,000 to
16,000 ft interval at the time of historical greatest depth of burial.
That depth range usually places the generation of most oil and gas
within or, in a few basins, below the compartmented hydraulic system,
which probably was overpressured at that time. The oil and gas generated
within the overpressured compartments apparently makes its way upward
through fractures within each compartment and may be trapped against the
external pressure
seal
or may be ejected by intermittent natural
hydraulic fracturing at the localities of the shallowest depth of burial
of each overpressured compartment. The mixed gas-oil-water fracturing
fluid probably bursts into the closest available, lower-pressured, but
not necessarily normally pressured, permeable bed or fault and loses its
drive. There is such a disproportionately large amount of oil and gas in
traps in the closest lower-pressured permeable reservoir rocks above
overpressured rock masses in proximity to present and/or past local
areas of shallowest depth of burial of those overpressured rock masses
in such diverse areas as the Cook Inlet, Gulf Coast, Niger Delta, and
Caspian Sea basins that the interpreted hydraulic fracture breakout
process appears to be essentially correct. The point of shallowest
burial may be the arched
top
of an anticline, of a dome, of a drape fold
over a buried hill or reef, of a tilted fault block, of the
top
of a
stack of overthrusts, or the
top
of the shale sheath peripheral to a
salt dome. It appears that all potential traps located within about one
mile, upward from and horizontally from the point of local shallowest
depth of burial of the
top
(base of the
top
seal
) of an overpressured
section should be explored (Figures 27,
28, 29, and
30).
The
foregoing is applicable where the shallowest depth of burial is due to
an upbulge of the
top
of an overpressured section. However, in regions
of great topographic relief, the shallowest depth of burial may be due
to a local very low surface elevation. In that situation, hydraulic
fracture breakout also occurs at the location of the shallowest depth of
burial; however, there is no buried local upbulge to pre-collect oil or
gas there. The Transylvanian Basin may be an example of that situation.
The
top
seal
of the overpressured section is horizontal and Romanian
geologists have reported the ascent of hot, medium-salinity water with
minor oil and gas in a few localities beneath major river valleys, but
they have not reported similar ascending water plumes below the adjacent
high plateaus.
Around 1970 Bobby Newton, then the Region Geologist in New Orleans, attempted to categorize the localities of large oil and gas pools in southern Louisiana relative to their pressure environments. His system categorized pressures by relations to stratigraphy; i.e., pressure boundaries rising across stratigraphy, parallel to stratigraphy, or dropping across stratigraphy. Newton’s descriptive categories, which required precise correlation of beds, were difficult to recognize and difficult to work with, particularly during the wildcatting and early field development stage, so the system was not adopted; however, his diagrams indicate that all of the major pools studied are in very close proximity to local points of shallowest depths of burial of the overpressured hydraulic system. Figures 31, 32, 33, and 34 are from a seminar prepared by Newton in support of his descriptive category system. Those readers who remember the Newton seminar may note that wildcat wells would be located at the same sites if the Newton descriptive system is used or if the proximity-to-the-shallowest-depth-of-burial genetic concept is adhered to.
Some oil and gas will escape entrapment in proximity to the regions of fracture breakout and may move far into the shallow hydraulic system. It may become trapped in shallow formations and, with luck, will escape degradation by water-borne bacteria. Conventional updip migration and trap concepts explain the occurrence of much of the “escaped” oil and gas.
Oil and
gas has also accumulated in abundance within the internal volumes of
abnormally pressured compartments. Accumulations may be in traps within
the internal volume or may be trapped within or against the bounding
seals. Many of the pools located within the internal volumes of
abnormally pressured compartments have tended to be rather small in the
Gulf Coast Basin, probably because the individual compartments are small
and because the reservoir sands are thin and discontinuous. All of the
internal sands are oil-filled in the Altamont-Bluebell overpressured
compartment in the Uinta Basin; all of the internal sands are gas filled
in the Blanco underpressured compartment in the San Juan Basin; and all
of the sands in the deep Wind River Basin overpressured compartment
appear to be gas filled. Over one billion barrels of oil have been
produced from Paleozoic reservoirs within the internal volume and within
the
top
seal
of the underpressured compartment in the Seminole Sag, a
small graben adjacent to the Arkoma Basin in southern Oklahoma.
The
trapped-against seals accumulations may be at the highest internal
elevation regions where the oil and gas awaits release by hydraulic
fracturing or may be in regionally permeable beds where they are cut by
bounding seals. The oil and gas pool in the fractured, overpressured
Monterey shale reservoir on the Lost Hills Anticline in the San Joaquin
Basin appears to be an example of oil and gas in a
pending-fracture-release pool. The large, underpressured Viking oil and
gas pools trending from the Oyen-Sedalia area through the Provost,
Killam, Bruce, Beaverhill Lake, Fort Saskatchewan, Fairydell-Bon Accord,
Westlock and Judy Creek fields in the Alberta Basin provide an example
of entrapment against a bounding
seal
. Those fields are in a
350-miles-long megatrap where the southwestward dipping Viking sand is
regionally cut by a horizontal
seal
at about sea level elevation (see
Figure 50).
An
important extra benefit from petroleum remaining within abnormally
pressured compartments, particularly in deeply eroded regions, is that
oil pools are protected from contact with bacteria-bearing meteoric
waters. For instance, the regional pressure
seal
in the Castile-Salado
evaporites has protected the shallow, underpressured giant oil pools in
West Texas from being bacterially degraded. The only bacterially
degraded oil in the entire West Texas-southeastern New Mexico area is in
above-the-
seal
beds, mainly near Santa Rosa, New Mexico. The foregoing
generalization applies to conditions prior to the intrusion of man.
Injection of bacteria bearing water during waterflooding has resulted in
local bacterial degradation of oil in some pools.
Many oil and gas pools within abnormally pressured compartments exhibit isolated ponds of water well above the pools’ water tables, probably because there was not enough vigor to fluid movements within sealed-off compartments to sweep all of the water out of the oil and gas pools. An example is provided by the Recluse - Bell Creek underpressured compartment in the northern Powder River Basin. In that compartment, the pool to pool interval pressure/depth ratio in the Muddy Formation is 33 psi/100 ft; i.e., the pool to pool pressure transmitting medium has the density of oil, rather than water. Thus a very large, continuous oil pool is indicated. However, there are large ponds of water which apparently have been prevented, by tight areas and local shaleouts in the Muddy sand, from moving downdip to the main water body. Thus the entire area is a huge oil pool with internal local ponds of water. Another example, of more direct interest to Amoco, is provided by the underpressured Wolfcampian Bough “C” limestone in eastern New Mexico. During the late 1950’s and early 1960’s, six widely separated oil pools were discovered. The pool to pool interval pressure/depth ratio was 33.6 psi/l00 ft; a density figure compatible with the oil in the six pools. Thus a very large, continuous oil pool was indicated. Amoco drilled an inter-pool wildcat, the State “DO” No.1, in a slight structural depression. The well yielded 350 ft of oil and gas cut mud and 5500 ft of slightly oil cut salty water on a drillstem test of the Bough “C”. Pipe was run and the well yielded 39 barrels of oil and 1728 barrels of salty water per day through perforations. The well was sold to an independent operator who placed a large pump on the well. After ten years, the water pond in the structural sag had been pumped out and the well had also produced 300,000 barrels of oil. The Bough “C” is now oil productive over almost its entire 500 square mile extent; however, there still are a few internal water ponds. Of more current interest to Amoco, both the North Poui oil and gas pool offshore Trinidad and the Saaja layered gas pool in Sharjah have some well log indications of water ponds; however, it appears that bottom water has not yet been encountered in either of those overpressured pools.
Oil and gas may have been generated below the compartmented layer in some basins. For instance, the sub-Fuson pays in the central Powder River Basin probably were generated below and have remained below the compartmented layer. The oi1 and gas appears to have been unaffected by the overlying compartments, except that the deep section may have been effectively shielded from surface influences like meteoric water drives. Despite the obvious advantage of not being subject to strong water flushes, the hydraulic layer below the compartmented layer has not been found productive in many basins. Some of the low productivity is probably due to limited deep drilling.
Ruptured Compartments
Figures 35-37
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Figure 35. Gas downdip from rupture of |
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Up to
now we have been dealing with compartments in which the bounding seals
have been continuously
intact
since their formation or have undergone
brief episodes of hydraulic fracturing and subsequent healing. There are
several recognized compartments in which the bounding seals have been
permanently ruptured by erosion or faulting or were breached by
hydraulic fracturing without subsequent healing. The remaining
seal
segments apparently are still as impervious to gas, oil, and water as
they were when the seals were complete; therefore recognition of
seal
segments is very important in petroleum exploration.
Pressures within a newly ruptured compartment will progressively change toward equilibrium with the pressures in the external water through fluid leakage into or out of the compartment at the point of rupture. When pressure equilibrium is reached at the elevation of the rupture, there is no pressure differential to move fluids farther. If the rupture is large, or if the adjacent rocks are very permeable, there may continue to be gravitationally driven fluid movement; i.e., water may trickle into a gas filled compartment and the gas may bubble out even if the water and gas pressures are equal. During the in-or-out movement of fluids, the internal pressure at the elevation of the rupture remains equivalent to the external water pressure; downdip gas remains underpressured relative to the pressures in the external water and the updip gas remains overpressured relative to the pressures in the external water (Figure 35). If the rupture is very small, or if the adjacent rocks have low permeability, the internal and external fluid systems may laterally coexist for a long time after attainment of pressure equilibrium. If the external pressure is decreased, generally through progressive erosion of cover, the fluids within the compartment will seep out to maintain pressure equilibrium. Figure 36 portrays the pressure-depth profiles which would be compatible with petroleum trapped within a ruptured compartment under the pressure conditions imposed by different locations of the rupture.
Compartments in which the bounding seals were breached by hydraulic fracturing at their shallowest depths of burial without subsequent healing may still contain huge amounts of oil and gas. The giant Milk River gas field in Alberta may be of this type. It fills an underpressured compartment with an internal gas pressure of 625 psi at its updip terminus. The adjacent external water pressure is also 625 psi. Figure 37 portrays the pressures at Milk River if PGl, the pressure in the gas, equals PWl, the pressure in the adjacent updip water. Note that the compartment is normally pressured at its updip leak point but, because gas is less dense than the external water, the gas pool is underpressured relative to the external water in its full downdip extent. The better known, underpressured, giant Medrano oil pool on the Cement Anticline in Oklahoma is of the same type. The Medrano pool is ruptured underground at its updip terminus. It has continued to leak oil as erosion has progressively removed cover and thereby reduced the external normal pressures. The leakage plume over this field has been extensively used by promoters of geological and geophysical techniques which directly sense the hydrocarbon plume or sense the chemical changes in rocks due to the continued presence of seepage oil.
A
compartment may be breached by erosion, generally at the pre-breaching
site of the shallowest depth of burial of the upper
seal
. When this
occurs, any oil or gas awaiting hydraulic fracture breakout would
suddenly be exposed to the atmosphere. The giant Athabasca tar sands
deposit in Alberta probably had this history. The deposit is at the
northeastern updip terminus of the sub-Viking pressure compartment which
extends over most of the Alberta Basin. Inasmuch as the water-bearing
formations contain salty water all the way up to the outcrops, the
compartment, now underpressured except at the rupture area, may have
been overpressured until erosional breaching.
The giant Oklahoma City Field apparently had a similar early history. That field is located at the updip terminus of the lower (sub-Meramec) tier of compartments in the Anadarko Basin compartmented layer. The compartment was breached by early Pennsylvanian erosion. A thin, but extensive tarry layer at the unconformity attests to the pre-erosion presence of a large oil pool. The unconformity was reburied by thousands of feet of Pennsylvanian and younger rocks. The Cherokee shale, overlying the buried unconformity, resealed the compartment and a trend of new oil pools from Criner-Payne, through Oklahoma City and West Edmond was established along the updip edge of the resealed compartment. Small pools continue to be discovered along the updip boundary of that compartment.
Rupture
of a
seal
downdip from the updip terminus of a dipping compartment will
lead to pressure equalization at elevation of the point of rupture but,
if the rupture is small or if the adjacent rocks have low permeability,
long columns of oil or gas may remain within the compartment, both updip
and downdip from the point of rupture (Figure 35). The internal
pressure-elevation profile will cross over the pressure-elevation
profile of the external water (Figure 36). Several of the tight gas
sands pools in the Rocky Mountains basins and in the Alberta Basin
appear to be of this type. For instance, each of the two largest
compartments in the “Deep Basin” tight gas sands area of Alberta have
more than two thousand feet of gas column downdip from the elevation of
internal-external pressure equilibrium.
The evidence for ruptured seals in the tight gas sand areas is not unassailable. It is possible that some of those compartments have not been ruptured; rather they are fully sealed but are in the “midlife identity crisis” period when compartments are passing from early basin-life overpressures to late basin-life underpressures.
A large
rupture in a compartment
seal
may lead to a normally pressured water
column within a compartment, not only downdip from the point of rupture,
but also updip to the base of any oil or gas column trapped against the
remaining updip
seal
segment. Thus, any wells drilled into the
water-bearing sector of the compartment would not yield an abnormal
pressure indicator of the presence of a compartment. It would be easy to
overlook the petroleum trapping potential of the unruptured updip
segment of the compartment
seal
. There is no current geological or
geophysical method known to the author for recognition of such
seal
segments except by inference. For instance, a trend of pools at the same
elevation, an unusually straight line trend of pools, superimposed
“stratigraphic trap” pools, or even the apparent abutment of different
salinity waters in apparently continuously permeable beds may spark
intuitive interest and lead to recognition of the fundamental trapping
mechanism while there is still time remaining and acreage available to
wring a reward from the interpretation.
The
terms “point of pressure equalization” and “
seal
rupture,” used in the
preceding paragraphs, may be misleading because they may create the
impression that the internal-external pressure equalization path is
necessarily quite short. In a few cases, the path from the internal
volume of a compartment to the external normal pressure control is a
very long distance, particularly if the equalization path extends from
one compartment into, across and out of an adjacent compartment. For
instance, the internal pressure at the base of the gas-filled Blanco
pressure compartment in the central San Juan Basin appears to be
controlled by the elevation of the Paleozoic rock outcrops in the Grand
Canyon, slightly over 200 miles away. The intervening path is
interpreted, on the basis of coincident elevations of potentiometric
surfaces, to be through the underpressured Paleozoic formations in the
Paradox Basin.
Mapping Compartments
Figures 38-51
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Text
The most fundamental elements of the petroleum geology of abnormal pressures and of the geology of compartments are the geology and the geometry of seals. In general, for petroleum exploration purposes, it is unimportant whether the pressures in a compartment are markedly abnormal or only slightly abnormal, whether the compartment encloses a thousand square miles or is only half that size, or whether a compartment contains Paleozoic and Mesozoic rocks or contains only Mesozoic rocks, but it is very important that the pattern of seals be recognized and understood and that the locations of seals crossing permeable beds be recognized and accurately mapped. The seals, not the whole compartments, trap or control the trapping of oil and gas.
For
mapping purposes, seals may be considered to be subsurface layers or
surfaces which are recognizable on both regional and local scales, may
be correlated from place to place and may be mapped like other
subsurface layers or surfaces.
Top
seals and bottom seals are like
“thick” unconformities; i.e., they may cut across or may parallel
depositional layers and are identifiable mainly on the basis of the
differential properties of the shallower and deeper sections. Vertical
seals are like “thick” faults; i.e., they cut across depositional layers
and are identifiable mainly on the basis of the differential properties
of the abutting sections. In the case of seals, the differential
properties referred to are the fluid pressure regimes in the adjacent
rocks. The skills and techniques used to map unconformities and faults
are generally applicable to the mapping of seals.
When commencing a study of subsurface pressures in a previously unstudied basin, an investigator should first determine if, and approximately where, abnormal pressures have been encountered in wells within the area of study. Most government field-development regulatory bodies in the United States and Canada require sworn-to public disclosure of the discovery shut-in pressures in all productive pools; so this data source is generally the best place to start. In most domestic basins that data source is sufficient to roughly outline the main pressure compartments, if present. In those Company locations which have old potentiometric surface maps on file, those maps should be examined for bands of over-steep dip; i.e., very high rates of change (Figure 38), reversed dip, or bands of no dip in an otherwise dipping potentiometric surface. Even if very inappropriate fluid densities were used in constructing the maps, the trends of seals cutting the mapped formations will likely be discernible.
The next step is to construct work maps and probably also construct supporting cross sections using only very reliable (preferably Amerada or Kuster gauges) pressure data from vertical wellbores. The outlines of any large compartments probably will become quite clear. Additional data will likely be required along the boundaries of the compartments, but there is generally little to be gained at this stage from an exhaustive gathering of test data from wells centrally located within large compartments. Having assembled a body of measured pressures data, a map of the potentiometric surfaces should be constructed. It is important to use a pressure-water head conversion factor which fits the densities of the fluids in the area. A pressure-elevation profile of reliable pressure data, using only normal pressures in vertical wellbores, is generally adequate to determine an appropriate local pressure-water head conversion value.
The
work maps must now be fleshed-out with more data along either side of
each
seal
. In some basins, like the downdip Gulf Coast Basin and the
western Sacramento Basin, the vertical seals tend to coincide with major
faults so regional structure should be considered in selecting the
mapped locations of seals. In assembling data from wells, an
investigator should be wary of pressures measured in formations which
are, or were, productive or are, or were, water disposal zones in nearby
fields or are productive of water in nearby cities; the pressures may
have been significantly altered by fluid withdrawal or by fluid
injection.
The next step is only a slight variation of the procedure well known to most experienced subsurface geologists; i.e., examine every indicated updip interruption in carrier bed continuity to determine if a stratigraphic trap type or fault type play may be made.
Figures 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, and 44 portray the suggested steps using the Anadarko Basin as the illustrative area of study. Figures 39, 40, and 41 are pressure-elevation profiles of discovery pressures in individual pools, using data derived mainly from state government regulatory sources. Note the generally clean separation of pressure profiles, hence leading to an early recognition of the reality and approximate locations of major pressure compartments. Figure 42 shows the approximate outline of the individual compartments in the combined Morrow and Springer formations. The structure map of the Morrow Formation (Figure 43) is referred to next to determine where interruptions in updip carrier bed continuity are indicated and thus where infill data are required. Combination of Figures 42 and 43 (Figure 44) portrays several updip compartment boundaries and corners, which are prospective. Many of those sites have been tested; some have been productive for years, and one is currently (1984) being developed; however, a few prospective updip corners are still untested and are currently being studied further by the Denver Region.
The Anadarko example may be misleadingly simple, inasmuch as the pressure control from fields is adequate to outline most of the pressure compartments. The more usual situation is that there are only a few pools in each compartment (Figure 45); so the investigator is faced with a large fleshing-out job using data from wireline tests, drillstem tests, echometer readings, and even densities of mud required to maintain reasonably balanced drilling. An even higher order of difficulty is presented by basins with few wells and few-to-no oil and gas pools. For instance, the compartmented layer is readily recognizable in wells in all of the coastal and offshore basins from the Gulf of Alaska to the Eel River Basin in California; however, there are only about 10 wells per basin so there are not enough data to permit adequate mapping of compartments there.
Pressure-depth profiles using only reliable pre-drawdown shut-in
pressures in several formations in individual fields or wells may
facilitate recognition of the vertical arrangement of pressure
compartments. The investigator should correct all within-pay pressures
for buoyancy to pressures at or below the bottom water surface.
Figure
46 illustrates the error which could be introduced by using a within-pay
pressure, particularly if that pressure was measured high up in a long
oil or gas column. Figure 47 portrays pressures measured at several
depths in an individual field. The profile indicates one abnormally
pressured compartment and the approximate location of the
top
seal
. That
information is sufficient to get an investigation underway. Figures
48
and 49 portray the follow-up steps; i.e., gather more data and then
construct maps. The next step will be to determine if the lateral
seal
between the two compartments crosses the plunging, northwest-trending
anticlines in the area. There may be down-plunge plays yet to be made
there.
Another “getting started” technique .is to construct regional cross sections using only very reliable data. Figure 50 is a portion of the regional cross section which led to .the.author’s investigation of the pressure compartments in the Alberta Basin. Note that the hydraulic interruption in the Viking sand near Killam is not readily apparent using reservoir pressures alone; the potentiometeric surface is required for recognition (Figures 50 and 51).
Future Work
This report is intended to provide a technical and conceptual background for using pressure data in developing and modifying exploration plays. The application techniques are sufficiently developed that the Regions may take over most pressure related applications and Geological Research may shift farther into a support-when-needed role on the subject. There is need for further development of geophysical techniques for identification and quantification of abnormal pressures. Also, further understanding of seals might be worthwhile, but it is not clear that new work by the Research Center is required now. If we wait until the Regions have worked with seals, research could be in response to real needs, not just to anticipated needs.
References
Alliquander, O., 1973, High pressures, temperatures plague deep drilling in Hungary: Oil and Gas Jour., v. 71, no. 21 (May 21), p. 97-100.
Anderson, R.A., Ingram, D.S., and Zanier, A.M., 1973, Determining fracture pressure gradients from well logs: Jour. Petrol. Tech., v. 25, p. 1259-1268.
Barker, C., 1972, Aquathermal pressuring, role of temperature in development of abnormal pressure zones: AAPG Bulletin, v. 56, p. 2068-2071.
Bradley, J.S., 1973, Abnormal formation pressure: Amoco Geological Research Report F73-G-6, 33 p., 25 figures.
Bradley, J.S., 1975, Abnormal formation pressure. AAPG Bulletin, v. 59, p. 957-973.
Bradley, J.S., 1976, Abnormal formation pressure: Reply: AAPG Bulletin, v. 60, p. 1127-1128.
Coffin, R.C., 1925. Notes on the circulation of water in the sands of structural basins as related to the occurrence of oil and gas in the Rocky Mountain region. Preliminary Report to Midwest Oil Company, March 14: 55 p., 2 plates.
Handin, J., and Hager, R.V., Jr., 1958, Experimental deformation of sedimentary rocks under confining pressure: Tests at high temperature: AAPG Bulletin, v. 42, p. 2892-2934.
Hottman, C.E., and Johnson, R.K., 1965, Estimation of formation pressures from log-derived properties. Jour. Pet. Tech., v. 17, p. 717-722.
Hubbert, M.K., 1940, The theory of ground water motion: Jour. Geo1., v. 48, p. 785-944.
Hubbert, M. K., 1954, Entrapment of petroleum under hydrodynamic conditions: AAPG Bulletin, v. 37, p. 1954-2026.
Illing, V.C., 1938, The origin of pressures in oil-pools: Science of Petroleum, Oxford Univ. Press, v. 6, p. 224-229.
Narr, W., and Currie, J.B., 1982, Origin of fracture porosity - example from Altamont Field, Utah: AAPG Bulletin, v. 66, p. 1231-1247.
Powley, D.E., 1976, Pressures, normal and abnormal: Amoco Geological Research Report M76-G-16, 11 p., 56 slides, 1 tape recording.
Powley, D.E., 1982, The relationship of shale compaction to oil and gas pools in the Gulf Coast Basin: Amoco Geological Research Report F82-G-23, 13 p., 60 figures, Appendix 500 figures.
Rogers, L., 1966, Shale-density log helps detect overpressure: Oil and Gas Journal, v. 64, no. 37, p. 126-130.
Ronai, A., 1978, Hydrogeology of great sedimentary basins: Proceedings of the Budapest Conference, 1967: International Association of Hydrologic Sciences Publication no. 120, 829 p.
Russell, W.L., 1956, Tilted fluid contacts in Mid-Continent region: AAPG Bulletin, v. 40, p. 2644-2668.
Vers1uys, J., 1932, Factors involved in segregation of oil and gas from subterranean water: AAPG Bulletin, v. 16, p. 924-942.
Appendix
Air standard and water standard (psi/100 ft)
Densities (pressure gradient, salinity, mud weight, API gravity)
Density vs. temperature and pressure for water and NaCl solutions
Density of average natural gas versus depth
Crude oil density versus temperature and pressure
Determination of subsurface density and pressure gradient from stock-tank API gravity and GOR
Depth correction to find true vertical depth of nonvertical boreholes
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