Geology and Mechanics of the Basin-Centered Gas Accumulation,
The Williams Fork Formation in the
migration
of the gas as it moves upward and outward from the Cameo
deep-basin coals. The overall distribution and pressure of the gas in the
Williams Fork is probably the direct result of pore-pressure assisted
fracturing and subsequent
migration
through the induced fracture systems. The
first place one might expect fracture assisted
migration
to occur is within the
gas-generative Cameo interval. When gas generation causes critical pore
pressure to be exceeded, the rock fractures, and the
rate
of gas escape from
the overpressured rock rapidly increases, stabilizing
or reducing its pressure and allowing gas to flow into a lower-pressured adjacent
sand body. One might expect this process to be repeated in a daisy-chain
fashion, moving outward and upward from the gas generative parts of the Cameo.
Ultimately, the ability of a given sand to sustain overpressured conditions will depend on the balance of the
rate
of gas entry with the
rate
of gas escape from the sand.