Petrophysics of the Lance
Sandstone
Reservoirs in Jonah Field, Sublette County, Wyoming
Cluff, Suzanne G., Robert M. Cluff
The Discovery Group, Inc, Denver, CO
Jonah field is a giant gas field producing
from
extremely low porosity and
permeability
sandstones. Wireline log data
from
62 wells near the center of the field were studied to characterize the porosity,
permeability
, and water saturation of the Lance reservoirs. The logs were environmentally corrected, normalized, shale volume and porosities calculated, water saturations determined by the dual water model, and net pay calculated using field-specific pay criteria. Ultimate gas recovery per well was estimated by decline curve analysis of monthly production data.
Within the upper 2500 ft (762 m) of the Lance Formation, which includes the entire productive interval in nearly all wells, the average well has 1000 ft (30 m) of net
sandstone
with an average porosity of 6.4%. The average
permeability
of all sandstones, estimated
from
core data derived equations, is an astonishingly low six microdarcies (0.006 mD). The average water saturation of all sandstones is 45%.
Net pay criteria were determined
from
cumulative storage capacity and cumulative flow capacity plots. While the average
sandstone
may have only 6% porosity, the low porosity sandstones contribute an insignificant fraction of the reservoir flow capacity. We estimate that over 95% of the flow capacity is
from
sandstones with greater than 6% porosity. A small percentage of high porosity (>10%) and high
permeability
rocks dominate the flow behavior of the reservoir and are probably critical to economic production. Using 6% porosity as an absolute net pay cutoff, the average net pay thickness at Jonah is 440 ft (134 m) with 9.3% porosity and 33% water saturation. The estimated average
permeability
of net pay is 25 microdarcies. Estimated ultimate recovery per well is approximately 4 BCFG on current 40-acre well spacing.