Resource Play Exploration and Exploitation:
Geochemical techniques for identifying
gas
and oil resource plays and prospects
Daniel M. Jarvie, Humble Geochemical Services, Humble, Texas
Resource plays are basically
hydrocarbon systems where the source and reservoir are the same rock unit or
formation. These source-reservoir units are generally continuous and represent
areas of organic matter preservation as reflected in organic richness. These
plays are typically for
shale
gas
, but may also include
shale
oil plays.
Evaluation of these plays suggests that there are several different types of
hydrocarbon system that may be described as (1) tight, high
gas
flow rate
thermogenic, (2) fractured, lower flow
gas
rate thermogenic, (3) interbedded
shale
/tight sand or silt thermogenic
gas
systems, and (4) fractured, lower
gas
flow rate biogenic.
Shale
oil resources are found in at least two types of
systems both being in the oil generation window: (1) highly fractured systems
and (2) relatively tight systems of interbedded source and tight
gas
or silt
zones. In either case of
shale
gas
or oil, completion engineering is a critical
component of extracting the
gas
or oil from these systems.
Various hydrocarbon systems are
used to illustrate these play types, e.g., the high maturity thermogenic plays
of the Ft. Worth, Delaware, and Arkoma basins, the low maturity thermogenic
plays of the Illinois Basin, the interbedded
shale
/reservoirs of the Bossier
Shale
of the East Texas Basin, and the biogenic Antrim
Shale
play of the
Michigan Basin. The Monterey Formation of the Santa Maria Basin and the
Williston Basin Bakken Formation oil play provide examples
shale
oil systems.