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==[[Buoyancy pressure]] profile==
 
==[[Buoyancy pressure]] profile==
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[[file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-15.png|thumb|{{figure number|2}}. Copyright: Coalson et al., 1994; courtesy RMAG.]]
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[[file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-15.png|thumb|{{figure number|2}}From <ref name=Coalsonetal_1994>Coalson, E. B., S. M. Goolsby, and M. H. Franklin, 1994, Subtle seals and fluid-flow barriers in carbonate rocks, ''in'' J. C. Dolson, M. L. Hendricks, and W. A. Wescott, eds., Unconformity related hydrocarbons in sedimentary sequences: Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists (RMAG) Guidebook for Petroleum Exploration and Exploitation in Clastic and Carbonate Sediments, p. 45-58.</ref>. Courtesy RMAG.]]
    
When a reservoir has formed in a trap and has come to pressure equilibrium with the water in the aquifer, the pore pressure of the hydrocarbons at different depths in the reservoir plot along a steeper gradient than the water gradient. [[:file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-15.png|Figure 2]] shows this relationship.
 
When a reservoir has formed in a trap and has come to pressure equilibrium with the water in the aquifer, the pore pressure of the hydrocarbons at different depths in the reservoir plot along a steeper gradient than the water gradient. [[:file:predicting-reservoir-system-quality-and-performance_fig9-15.png|Figure 2]] shows this relationship.
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==See also==
 
==See also==
* [[Pore–fluid interaction]]
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* [[Pore-fluid interaction]]
 
* [[Characterizing rock quality]]
 
* [[Characterizing rock quality]]
 
* [[Pc curves and saturation profiles]]
 
* [[Pc curves and saturation profiles]]

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