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Integration of Soil Gas Geochemical and Remotely Sensed Surface Lineament Data for Oil and Gas Exploration in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin
By
Lynden A. Penner, M.Sc., P.Eng. P.Geo. ([email protected])
J.D. Mollard and Associates Limited, Regina, SK
Integration
of remotely sensed lineament and soil gas geochemical data with
subsurface
geological and geophysical datatasets has proven useful for searching out
tectonically inherited
subsurface
structures and associated prospective oil and
gas targets at several locations in southern Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Remotely
sensed images show lineament patterns and diagnostic geomorphic features at
regional and local scales throughout the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin. The
lineaments are often clustered along two or more dominant azimuthal trends,
forming distinctive patterns resembling regional joint patterns in sedimentary
rock. These distinctive surface trends and patterns appear to be genetically
related to
subsurface
structural elements that have been observed over a number
of oil and gas fields.
Contoured
and color enhanced soil gas data
maps
suggest patterns of hydrocarbon seepage
along preferred migration pathways, particularly over and around oil and gas
reservoirs. Gas samples are analyzed for trace concentrations of methane,
ethane, propane, butane, hydrogen and helium. Diagnostic gas ratios that
characterize areas of anomalous gas seepage are used to predict compositions of
source reservoirs. Such data are thought to yield direct evidence of
hydrocarbons in the
subsurface
, even though in places gas constituent
concentrations in near-surface samples can be affected by multiple gas source
mixing and differential gas migration mechanisms.
Structural elements that can contribute to identified soil gas anomalies and surface lineaments include regional systematic fracture patterns, reactivated fault movement associated with regional tectonism, fracture-controlled salt dissolution with associated differential subsidence effects, differential crustal rebound associated with preglacial erosion and deglaciation, and paleoerosion and paleodepositional patterns influenced by underlying structure.
Several case history examples illustrate the different types of data correlated, the techniques used, and study results. They include oil and shallow-gas pool areas in western Saskatchewan and southeastern Alberta. Integration of remotely sensed lineament and soil gas geochemical data is currently being applied at the Weyburn oil pool in southeastern Saskatchewan to help assess the integrity of a Mississippian carbonate reservoir subjected to CO2 injection for enhanced oil recovery.
