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Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 55, No. 06, February 11, 2013. Pages 21 and 23.

Overpressure and Hydrocarbon Accumulations in Tertiary Strata, Gulf Coast of Louisiana

Phil Nelson
U.S. Geological Survey Denver, Colorado

Many oil and gas reservoirs in Tertiary strata of southern Louisiana are located close to the interface between a sandrich, normally pressured sequence and an underlying sand-poor, overpressured sequence. The transition from normally pressured to highly overpressured sediments is documented by conversion of Previous HitmudNext Hit Previous HitweightsNext Hit to Previous HitpressureNext Hit, plotting of all Previous HitpressureNext Hit data from an individual field as a function of depth (Figure 1), and identification of a top and base of the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone. Vertical extents of Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zones in 34 fields across southern onshore Louisiana range from 300 to 9,000 feet and are greatest in younger strata and in the larger fields. Display of Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zones on geologic cross sections illustrates the relative independence of the depth of the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone and geologic age.

Figure 1: A field with a thin Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone whose top is at 11,500 feet depth, as revealed by Previous HitmudNext Hit Previous HitweightsNext Hit. Most of the oil and gas produced from this field has been produced from depths above the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone (blue rectangle). Other fields differ in the thickness of the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone and the relative depth range of productive intervals.

Comparison of the depth - distribution of Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zones with production intervals confirms previous findings that production intervals generally overlap the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone in depth, and that the median production depth lays above the base of the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone in most fields. However, in 11 of 55 fields with deep drilling, substantial amounts of oil and gas have been produced from depths deeper than 2,000 feet below the base of the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone (Figure 2).

Figure 2: Previous HitPressureNext Hit transition zones in 10 fields are shown on a north-south cross section in southern Louisiana. Vertical blue bars show top and base of Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone in each field. Note the gulfward progression of overpressure from older to younger strata, as originally pointed out by Dickinson (1953).

Previous HitMudNext Hit weight data in seven fields show that “local” Previous HitpressureNext Hit gradients range from 0.91 to 1.26 psi/ft below the base of the Previous HitpressureNext Hit transition zone. Previous HitPressureTop gradients are higher, and computed effective stress gradients are negative in younger strata in coastal areas. This finding indicates that a greater potential for fluid and sediment movement exists there than in older Tertiary strata.

 

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