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Evidence for a Hydrodynamic Aquifer in the Lower Miocene Sands of the Mad Dog Field, Gulf of Mexico*
Troy A. Dias1, David L. Tett1, and Michelle T. Croasdaile1
Search and Discovery Article #10221 (2010)
Posted January 25, 2010
*Adapted from extended abstract from AAPG Convention, Denver, Colorado, June 7-10, 2009
1BHP Billiton Petroleum, Houston, Texas, USA ([email protected])
Hydrodynamic aquifers, which are associated with tilted hydrocarbon
fluid
contacts, have been observed in various basins around the world. This paper presents evidence for a regionally extensive hydrodynamic aquifer in the Lower Miocene sands of the Atwater Fold Belt in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, believed to be the first of its kind in such a deep sub-salt structure. The evidence for a hydrodynamic aquifer comprises formation MDT pressure data from various drilled structures in the Atwater Fold Belt area, as well as mapped wide-azimuth seismic data, drilled oil-water contacts and production data from the Mad Dog Field.
The inferred mechanism for creating the hydrodynamic effect is believed to be mechanical compaction and dewatering of the large column of sediments in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. Due to increasing overburden pressure, the aquifer gradually becomes overpressured, and expulsion of aquifer brine occurs after the fracture gradient is exceeded at a weak point in the regionally connected sand system, creating an escape valve to shallower formations. It is theorized that the geographic locations of the areas of highest compaction and of the
“escape valve” control the direction of
flow
in the aquifer.
The observed hydrodynamic aquifer has a pronounced impact on the oil-in-place distribution for the Lower Miocene sands of the Mad Dog Field, where a tilted contact caused by a hydrodynamic aquifer is required to explain the oil-water contacts observed from drilling results and seismically-mapped spill points. The presence of a hydrodynamic system in the Lower Miocene of the Gulf of Mexico may also impact the understanding of the charge history and
fluid
contact distribution within other reservoirs and exploration play types in this deepwater region.
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Hydrodynamic activity is created by the lateral
Bjørlykke has identified numerous mechanisms that could create hydrodynamic activity, the most prominent being influx due to meteoric (i.e. atmospheric) water. However, this mechanism cannot explain the observed hydrodynamic activity in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. Instead, it is believed that sediment compaction due to subsidence is the most likely cause, due to the large overburden and significant rate of sedimentation.
The majority of the numerous exploration and development wells that have been drilled in the Atwater Fold Belt area have MDT or RFT formation pressure measurements in Miocene age sands. Some wells have formation pressure estimated from mud weight required during drilling. In general, these pressure measurements indicate that the aquifer is overpressured relative to hydrostatic, with a large number of wells in the Lower Miocene showing a similar degree of overpressure of around 3,000 psi.
Examining the formation pressures in more detail, there appears to be a noticeable trend in the degree of overpressure versus geographic location, which is observed across several fields. Creating a potentiometric plot of aquifer overpressure in the Lower Miocene versus geographic location, it is observed that the degree of overpressure decreases towards the east-northeast, at a vector of approximately 75 degrees from true North (Figure 1). There is no correlation to salinity or depth which would explain the observed variation in overpressure; instead, it is believed that hydrodynamic activity in the aquifer may be the most likely explanation.
The inferred mechanism for creating this hydrodynamic effect is believed to be mechanical compaction and dewatering of the large column of sediments in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. Due to increasing overburden pressure, the aquifer gradually becomes overpressured, and expulsion of aquifer brine occurs after the fracture gradient is exceeded at a weak point in the regionally connected Lower Miocene sand system, creating an escape valve to shallower formations. It is theorized that the geographic locations of the areas of highest compaction and of the “escape valve” control the direction of
The magnitude of the change in the overpressure is approximately 6 psi/mile, or 0.0011 psi/ft. An illustrative estimate of the order of magnitude of the
Making some broad assumptions for average permeability, reservoir thickness and areal extent, and solving for rate from the above equation converted into field units, gives a
It can be seen from above that only a very small amount of
Discovered in 1998 in a water depth of about 4,500 feet, the Mad Dog Field lies within the Mississippi Fan Fold Belt, also known as the Atwater Fold Belt, which is a prominent contractional fold-and-thrust belt located in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico (Moore, 2001). The Mad Dog structure is a large, north-south trending, faulted, compressional anticline with the majority of discovered hydrocarbon resource in the Lower Miocene turbidite reservoirs. Interpretation from conventional core in the main reservoir interval suggests that the reservoirs are primarily amalgamated and layered sheet sands, with good porosity and permeability.
The Mad Dog Lower Miocene reservoir is subdivided into two segments – East and West – each with nearly identical oil properties. Actual oil-water contacts for both compartments were penetrated in two wells drilled to date: Mad Dog Deep-2 in the East and Mad Dog-11 in the West, shown in Figure 2. Sand extent, reservoir quality and
Following spar installation in 2004, the Mad Dog Field was brought online in January 2005. In the years since first oil was achieved, pressure support due to aquifer influx has been observed in most Lower Miocene wells with significant production history. No water injection wells have been drilled to date.
As has been pointed out by Dickey (1988), the aquifer pressure trend illustrated in Figure 1 may be caused by separate compartmentalized aquifers, and hence may not be indicative of
Prior to analyzing sub-regional aquifer pressure data, the downdip extent of oil in the Mad Dog West segment was difficult to explain using the best-available structure maps based on 3-D seismic data. The oil-water contact intersected by appraisal drilling in the West segment is deeper than the mapped spill point to the southwest by around 400 feet.
In a revised interpretation, the hydrodynamic aquifer model was applied to the existing structural map, with the tilted oil-water contact defined by the regional aquifer pressure trend from offset well MDT data. The inferred tilted oil-water contact, using the pressure potential shown in Figure 1, is aligned with the apparent mapped spill point to the southwest, as shown in Figure 3.
A hydrodynamic aquifer is believed to exist in the Lower Miocene sands of the Atwater Fold Belt area, in the vicinity of the Mad Dog Field. While hydrodynamic aquifers have been noted in numerous other parts of the world, it is believed that this is the first time that evidence for a hydrodynamic aquifer has been observed in the deepwater, sub-salt reservoirs of the Gulf of Mexico.
With reference to the Mad Dog Field, a regional hydrodynamic aquifer model most easily explains the observed oil-water contacts and is consistent with the mapped structure. Regional formation pressure data suggests that the direction of
The presence of a hydrodynamic aquifer system in the Lower Miocene is consistent with the production history of Mad Dog to date, and affects future development plans for the field. It may also impact the understanding of the charge history and
The authors would like to thank the staff and management at BHP Billiton for their support and for permission to publish this paper. The authors would also like to thank BP and Chevron, co-owners of the Mad Dog Field, for granting permission to publish this paper.
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