Evolution of a sand-rich submarine channel–lobe system, and the impact of mass-transport and transitional-flow deposits on reservoir heterogeneity: Magnus Field, Northern North Sea
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Published:2021-02-25
Issue:3
Volume:27
Page:petgeo2020-095
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ISSN:1354-0793
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Container-title:Petroleum Geoscience
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Petroleum Geoscience
Author:
Steventon Michael J.1ORCID, Jackson Christopher A.-L.1ORCID, Johnson Howard D.1, Hodgson David M.2, Kelly Sean3ORCID, Omma Jenny4ORCID, Gopon Christine4, Stevenson Christopher5ORCID, Fitch Peter1
Affiliation:
1. Basins Research Group (BRG), Department of Earth Science & Engineering, Imperial College, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BP, UK 2. School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK 3. EnQuest PLC, Annan House, Palmerston Road, Aberdeen AB11 5QP, UK 4. Rocktype Ltd, 87 Divinity Road, Oxford OX4 1LN, UK 5. School of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, 4 Brownlow Street, Liverpool L69 3GP, UK
Abstract
The geometry, distribution and rock properties (i.e. porosity and permeability) of turbidite reservoirs, and the processes associated with turbidity current deposition, are relatively well known. However, less attention has been given to the equivalent properties resulting from laminar sediment gravity-flow deposition, with most research limited to cogenetic turbidite debrites (i.e. transitional-flow deposits) or subsurface studies that focus predominantly on seismic-scale mass-transport deposits (MTDs). Thus, we have a limited understanding of the ability of subseismic MTDs to act as hydraulic seals, and their effect on hydrocarbon production and/or carbon storage. We investigate the gap between seismically resolvable and subseismic MTDs, and transitional-flow deposits on long-term reservoir performance in this analysis of a small (<10 km-radius submarine fan system), Late Jurassic, sandstone-rich stacked turbidite reservoir (Magnus Field, Northern North Sea). We use core, petrophysical logs, pore fluid pressure, quantitative evaluation of minerals by scanning electron microscopy (QEMSCAN) and 3D seismic-reflection datasets to quantify the type and distribution of sedimentary facies and rock properties. Our analysis is supported by a relatively long (c. 37 years) and well-documented production history. We recognize a range of sediment gravity deposits: (i) thick-/thin-bedded, structureless and structured turbidite sandstone, constituting the primary productive reservoir facies (c. porosity = 22%, permeability = 500 mD); (ii) a range of transitional-flow deposits; and (iii) heterogeneous mud-rich sandstones interpreted as debrites (c. porosity ≤ 10%, volume of clay = 35%, up to 18 m thick). Results from this study show that over the production timescale of the Magnus Field, debrites act as barriers, compartmentalizing the reservoir into two parts (upper and lower reservoir), and transitional-flow deposits act as baffles, impacting sweep efficiency during production. Prediction of the rock properties of laminar- and transitional-flow deposits, and their effect on reservoir distribution, has important implications for: (i) exploration play concepts, particularly in predicting the seal potential of MTDs; (ii) pore-pressure prediction within turbidite reservoirs; and (iii) the impact of transitional-flow deposits on reservoir quality and sweep efficiency.Supplementary material: of data and methods are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5313860
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Subject
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Economic Geology,Geochemistry and Petrology,Geology,Fuel Technology
Reference155 articles.
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