Difference between revisions of "East Breaks seal rock"

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[[Category:Critical elements of the petroleum system]]  
 
[[Category:Critical elements of the petroleum system]]  
 
[[Category:Sedimentary basin analysis]]
 
[[Category:Sedimentary basin analysis]]
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[[Category:East Breaks]]

Revision as of 20:31, 30 January 2014

Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps
Series Treatise in Petroleum Geology
Part Critical elements of the petroleum system
Chapter Sedimentary basin analysis
Author John M. Armentrout
Link Web page
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Description

The deepwater sands of the Glob alt reservoir are encased in hemipelagic mudstones and have a top seal associated with the condensed section of the Glob alt depositional cycle.[1] The well-log cross section in Figure 4-48 shows the correlation of the Glob alt sandstones. The top seal, which occurs above the log cross section, is a major mudstone condensed interval coincident with the Glob alt datum labeled on Figure 4-47. Precondensed section mudstones encasing the Glob alt sandstones provide local top seal and lateral seal.

Effectiveness

The top seal of the Glob alt reservoir is especially effective because it is thick and has a regional extent as a consequence of its position at a third-order turnaround from regression to transgression. This turnaround is from regressive cycles 3.4–3.5–3.6 to transgressive cycles 3.7–3.8 on the Haq et al.[2] cycle chart (see Figure 4-25).

Despite its regional extent and thickness, hydrocarbons have leaked upward into the Hyal B and Trim A reservoirs, most probably along faults during intervals of fault movement with consequent dilation of fracture networks along the fault

Carrier beds and seal evaluation

Impermeable rocks also affect migration pathways. Porous and permeable beds bounded above and below by impermeable rocks can provide highly effective hydrocarbon carrier beds.

See also

References

  1. Armentrout, J., M., 1991, Paleontological constraints on depositional modeling: examples of integration of biostratigraphy and seismic stratigraphy, Pliocene–Pleistocene, Gulf of Mexico, in Weimer, P., Link, M., H., eds., Seismic Facies and Sedimentary Processes of Submarine Fans and Turbidite Systems: New York, Springer-Verlag, p. 137–170.
  2. Haq, B., Hardenbol, J., Vail, P., R., 1988, Mesozoic and Cenozoic chronostratigraphy and cycles of sea-level change: SEPM Special Publication 42, p. 71–108.

External links

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