Natural fracture propping and earthquake-induced oil migration in fractured basement reservoirs

Author:

Holdsworth R.E.12,McCaffrey K.J.W.12,Dempsey E.3,Roberts N.M.W.4,Hardman K.1,Morton A.5,Feely M.6,Hunt J.6,Conway A.7,Robertson A.8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, DH1 3LE Durham, UK

2. Geospatial Research Ltd., Harrison House, DH1 4EL Durham, UK

3. Department of Geography, Geology and Environment, University of Hull, HU6 7RX Hull, UK

4. Geochronology & Tracers Facility, British Geological Survey, NG12 5GG Nottingham, UK

5. HM Research Associates Ltd., St. Ishmaels, SA62 3TJ Pembrokeshire, UK, and Cambridge Arctic Shelf Programme (CASP), University of Cambridge, CB3 0UD Cambridge, UK

6. Geofluids Research Laboratory, National University of Ireland, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland

7. CONSCO Ltd., Oakleigh House, Auchattie, AB31 6PT Aberdeenshire, UK

8. Eastside, Whitecairns, AB23 8XA Aberdeen, UK

Abstract

Abstract The geological processes that create fluid storage capacity and connectivity in global fractured basement reservoirs are poorly understood compared to conventional hydrocarbon plays. Hosting potentially multibillion barrels of oil, the upfaulted Precambrian basement of the Rona Ridge, offshore west of Shetland, UK, gives key insights into how such reservoirs form. Oil presence is everywhere associated with sub-millimeter- to meter-thickness mineralized fracture systems cutting both basement and local preseal cover sequences. Mineral textures and fluid inclusion geothermometry suggest a low-temperature (90–220 °C), near-surface hydrothermal system, as does the preservation of clastic sediments in the same fractures. These fills act as permanent props holding fractures open, forming long-term fissures in the basement that permit oil ingress and storage. Calcite-fill U-Pb dating constrains the onset of mineralization and contemporaneous oil charge to the Late Cretaceous. The additional preservation of oil-stained injected sediment slurries and silica gels along basement faults suggests that rift-related seismogenic faulting initiated lateral oil migration from Jurassic source rocks into the adjacent upfaulted ridge. Subsidence below sea level in the latest Cretaceous sealed the ridge with shales, and buoyancy-driven migration of oil into the preexisting propped fracture systems continued long after the cessation of rifting. These new observations provide an explanation for the viability of sub-unconformity fractured basement reservoirs worldwide, and have wider implications for subsurface fluid migration processes generally.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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