Temperature trap regime
Temperature traps are those in which trap boundaries are created or controlled by subsurface temperatures. Both low temperatures and high temperatures can create trapping conditions for hydrocarbons.
Classes and families
The classes and families of the temperature trap regime are outlined below.
Regime | Class | Family | Subfamily |
---|---|---|---|
Temperature traps | Gas hydrate traps | Low-temperature traps; Accumulations in which hydrocarbon gases occur as a solid, ice-like compound of gas and water, formed under conditions of extreme low temperature and high pressure. | |
Basin-center gas; Accumulations typically found in deep, hot basin centers in which all available pore space is saturated with gas. | High-temperature traps | Generative traps; High temperatures result in maturation of source rock, which generates and expels sufficient volume of hydrocarbons to saturate pore space of all nearby reservoirs. |
Regime: Temperature traps
- Class: Gas hydrate traps
- Family: Low-temperature traps
- Accumulations in which hydrocarbon gases occur as a solid, ice-like compound of gas and water, formed under conditions of extreme low temperature and high pressure.
- Class: Basin-center gas
- Accumulations typically found in deep, hot basin centers in which all available pore space is saturated with gas.
- Family: High-temperature traps
- Subfamily: Generative traps
- High temperatures result in maturation of source rock, which generates and expels sufficient volume of hydrocarbons to saturate pore space of all nearby reservoirs.
- Family: High-temperature traps