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Reservoir Heterogeneity and Characterization in Deltaic Depositional
Systems- Outcrop Analogs for Heavy
Oil
and
Oil
Sand Developments*
By
Grant D. Wach1 and Curtis Archie2
Search and Discovery Article #40285 (2008)
Posted April 4, 2008
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for AAPG Hedberg Conference, “Heavy
Oil
and Bitumen in Foreland Basins – From Processes to Products,” September 30 - October 3, 2007 – Banff, Alberta, Canada
1 Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada ([email protected])
2 Petrotrin, Point a Pierre, Trinidad and Tobago
Hydrocarbon occurrences range from the Cretaceous to Pleistocene in the Eastern Venezuelan and Trinidad basins. Distribution and occurrences of heavy
oil
and
oil
sands form an apparently random stratigraphic pattern within the Tertiary succession in the Trinidad basins. Regional controls on the distribution of heavy
oil
and
oil
sand include the age and stratigraphy of the deposit, history of uplift and faulting, and lithofacies variability keyed to depositional environments. Heavy
oil
and
oil
sand reservoirs within the same stratigraphic interval exhibit a variety of API values.
Tectonic regional controls produce thermal events that affect source
rock
maturation. Faults control migration, provide trapping mechanisms, and can compartmentalize reservoirs. Depositional controls impact source
rock
quality, reservoir distribution, and reservoir quality. Biodegradation and water washing of deposits can occur within separate reservoir compartments in the same stratigraphic reservoir interval.
This article examines the distribution of heavy
oil
and
oil
sand reservoirs, summarizes the potential controls on the distribution of lower API gravity reservoirs, and provides examples from the Trinidadian basins. We will define heavy
oil
as having API gravity below 22.3° and
oil
sand with less than 10°API.
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uStructure & tectonic controls
uStructure & tectonic controls
uStructure & tectonic controls
uStructure & tectonic controls
uStructure & tectonic controls
uStructure & tectonic controls
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Trinidad lies in the eastern reaches of the eastern Venezuelan Basin (Figure 1) and is subjected to compressive stresses from the NNW that produced transpressional faults and NE-SW trending folds and thrust faults, dividing Trinidad into three discrete basins - a Northern, Southern and Southwestern. Most hydrocarbon occurrences are found in the Southern Basin associated with Late Tertiary structures.
At least three tectonic phases account for the deformation across the Southern Basin (Kennan and Pindell, 2007): 1) southeast-directed thrusting during the Miocene; 2) Pliocene strike-slip along the NE-SW faults and growth faulting; and 3) Pliocene-Recent strike-slip faulting and normal faulting. These phases account for the major tectonic elements in and around the Southern Basin and their associated
Oils found onshore and offshore Trinidad are attributed to the same geochemical family, with differences in geochemical composition due to variations in maturity, source type facies, and alteration (Talukdar et al., 1988, 1990).
Geochemical work by Rodrigues and Deokie (1995) indicates that
Structure and Tectonic Controls
Structural controls on heavy-
In Trinidad the heavy-
Permeabilities vary from 10 to 1495 md, depending on reservoir shale content. Shallow formations exhibit high permeabilities of 0.5 to 1.5 darcies, of which unconsolidated reservoirs are typical. Permeability generally decreases with depth, and at the Cruse level it averages 50 md. Hydrocarbon gravities vary from <10° API
Reservoir Lithology and Depositional Environment The sandstones forming the uppermost Miocene through Plio-Pleistocene reservoirs are immature litharenites, with evidence of sediment recycling; grains are dominantly fine- to lower medium-grained and subrounded. Overall the sands were deposited within a deltaic setting.
API Table 1 illustrates the variability in the API of oils within fields, in this case the Guapo block of the Pliocene Morne L’Enfer Formation exposed in the Stollmeyer Quarry (Wach and Vincent, 2008). Shallower reservoir intervals have excellent porosity and permeability, but API gravity is poor (low) in the younger Cruse interval.
Several studies have attempted to evaluate the controls of gravity variations among crude oils in Trinidad. These studies conclude that Common to all studies is that the complex distribution may be a function of multiple alteration processes (Heppard et al., 1990; Talukdar et al., 1988, 1990; Rodrigues and Deokie 1995). These include biodegradation, water washing, gas-condensate mixing, gas stripping, evaporative fractionation, thermal alteration, and alteration imposed by secondary migration. If alteration processes are the major controls on API gravity distribution, accurate API gravity prediction will entail an understanding of geochemical changes, migration pathways and history, source kitchens, and subsurface temperature variations which should be reflected in reservoir crude qualities.
Rambarran (1987) showed the significance of gravity segregation of heavy
In Table 1 it can be argued that the shallower reservoir interval, the Cruse, may have been subjected to biodegradation of the oils leading to the lower API gravity. However, previous work by Vincent and Wach (2007) suggested there is not necessarily a direct
Table 2 is a summary of the geological controls that are apparent in the distribution of heavy
Beard, J.T., 1985, The general geology of the Guapo Field, Trinidad. Trans. 4th Latin American Geological Conference, Port of Spain, 1979, v. 2, p. 684-689. Higgins, G.E, 1955, The Barrackpore-Wilson Oilfield of Trinidad: Jour Inst Petroleum, v. 41, p. 125-147. Heppard, P.H., R.L. Ames, and L.M. Ross, 1990, Migration of oils into Samaan Field, offshore Trinidad, West Indies, in K.A. Gillezeau, ed., Transactions of the Second Geological Conference of the Geological Society of Trinidad and Tobago, p. 157-168.
Hosein, F., 1990. Exploration of the middle Miocene Kennan, L., and J. Pindell, 2007, Middle Miocene orogeny in Trinidad: Record of Caribbean collision and template for younger deformation, in Caribbean exploration - Planning for the future: 4th Geological Conference of the GSTT, oral sessions and field trips.
Rambarran, H., 1987, Significance of gravity segregation in heavy- Requejo, A. G., C.C. Wielchowsky, M.J. Klosterman, and R. Sassen, 1994, Geochemical characterization of lithofacies and organic facies in Cretaceous organic-rich rocks from Trinidad, East Venezuela Basin: Organic Geochemistry, v. 22, p. 441-459. Rodrigues, K., and R.C. Deokie, 1995, Abstracts 3rd GSTT Conference and 14th Caribbean Geological Conference and 14th Caribbean Geological conference, Trinidad, p. 66.
Russell, A., 1988, Reservoir
Talukdar, S.C., O. Gallango, and A. Ruggiero, 1988, Generation and migration of
Talukdar, S.C., W.G. Dow, and K.M. Persad, 1990, Deep Vincent, Hasley, and Grant D. Wach, 2007, Paleogene Slope Deposits; Examples from the Chaudiere, Pointe-a-Pierre and San Fernando Formations, Central Range, Trinidad (abstract): 27th Annual GCSSEPM Foundation Bob F. Perkins Research Conference, p. 39. Wach, G.D., Lolley, C.S., Mims, D.S., Sellers, C.A., 2004, Well placement, cost reduction, and increased production using reservoir models based on outcrop, core, well-log, seismic data, and modern analogs: Onshore and offshore Western Trinidad, AAPG Memoir 80, p. 279-307.
Wach, Grant D., and Hasley Vincent, 2008, Reservoir heterogeneity and characterization in deltaic depositional systems - outcrop analogs for heavy
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