Structure and Reservoir Characterization of Farnham Dome Field,
Carbon
County
Farnham Dome in east-central
Drilling along the crest of Farnham Dome in the
1920s and 1930s resulted in the discovery of a significant deposit of
carbon
dioxide
(
CO2
)in the Jurassic Navajo Sandstone and
smaller accumulations of
CO2
in Triassic, Permian, and Pennsylvanian
reservoirs. More recent additional drilling and seismic data revealed the
surface anticline was a shallow feature on the west flank of the broader
anticline that forms the trap for the
CO2
. Most of the
CO2
may have migrated
into the trap between 10 and 58 Ma. The gas accumulation is hydrodynamically
displaced to the northwest resulting in a lower gas/water contact on the
northwest side of the structure. Nearly 5 BCF of
CO2
was produced before field
abandonment in 1979 for lack of a market. Currently, a newly drilled well is
shut-in prior to construction of a plant to process the gas to food-grade
liquid
CO2
.
The UGS studied Farnham Dome field
as an analogue for
sequestration
of
CO2
in
sequestration
of
CO2
in