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Resource Play Exploration and Exploitation:  Geochemical techniques for identifying Previous HitgasNext Hit 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 Previous HitgasNext Hit, but may also include shale oil plays.  Previous HitEvaluationNext Hit of these plays suggests that there are several different types of hydrocarbon system that may be described as (1) Previous HittightNext Hit, high Previous HitgasNext Hit flow rate thermogenic, (2) fractured, lower flow Previous HitgasNext Hit rate thermogenic, (3) interbedded shale/Previous HittightNext Hit sand or silt thermogenic Previous HitgasNext Hit systems, and (4) fractured, lower Previous HitgasNext Hit 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 Previous HittightNext Hit systems of interbedded source and Previous HittightNext Hit Previous HitgasNext Hit or silt zones.  In either case of shale Previous HitgasNext Hit or oil, completion engineering is a critical component of extracting the Previous HitgasTop 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.