RESERVOIR
QUALITY AND PETROPHYSICAL MODEL OF THE TARN DEEP-
WATER
SLOPE-APRON
SYSTEM, NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA
HELMOLD, Kenneth P., Alaska Division of Oil & Gas, Anchorage, AK 99501, [email protected], CAMPAIGN, Wayne J., ConocoPhillips Alaska, Inc, Anchorage, AK 99501, MORRIS, William R., ConocoPhillips Co, Houston, TX 77095, HASTINGS, Douglas S., Brooks Range Petroleum Corp, Anchorage, AK 99503, and MOOTHART, Steven R., ConocoPhillips Alaska Inc, Anchorage, AK 99501
The Tarn Field, North Slope, Alaska, lies southwest of the Kuparuk River
Field and produces approximately 25,000 BOPD. The
reservoir
occurs as a
stratigraphic trap along the base of slope within the Brooks Range foreland
basin, and represents confined and unconfined slope-apron deposits of Cenomanian
age. Sediment supplied to these systems ranges from mud-rich to mixed sediment
and sand-rich sources. At maximum lowstand slope gullies fed two separate, but
contemporaneous, slope apron systems.
The
reservoir
consists of very fine- to fine-grained, moderately- to
well-sorted litharenites with an average composition of Q10F10L80
and Ls40Lv20Lm40.
The sandstones consists largely of lithic grains of argillaceous sedimentary and
metasedimentary detritus, and lesser amounts of epiclastic volcanic grains. They
also contain a significant amount pyroclastic glass of intrabasinal origin that
has altered to analcime. Analcime occurs as pseudomorphic replacement of glass
shards, pumiceous fragments and vitrophyric grains and as spherulitic
pore-filling cement. The pore system is largely primary with core porosities
ranging from 4-28% and permeabilities form 0.1-50 md. Secondary intragranular
porosity resulting from glass dissolution is a small but significant component
of the pore system. Authigenic quartz rims on moldic grains are a by-product of
dissolution and probably formed contemporaneous with analcime.
Reservoir
distribution
and characteristics are largely controlled by the
depositional elements and sedimentary facies within the slope apron systems. The
sand-rich systems have the best
reservoir
quality and connectivity. In mixed
sediment systems,
reservoir
quality decreases from channel to lobe to levee
deposits. Slope aprons confined in a sub-basin show greater
reservoir
connectivity than in unconfined settings.
The lithic nature of the
reservoir
presents unique challenges to log
analysis. The variable mineralogies and physical characteristics of the lithic
fraction are complicating factors, as is the low-density analcime. Grain
densities vary from 2.52-2.78 g/cc and largely reflect the
distribution
of
analcime and lithic grains. Petrologic data combined with routine core analyses
were utilized to develop a log model for estimating porosity, permeability and
saturation
.