Affiliation:
1. NARG, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, Manchester University, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
2. Basin Studies and Petroleum Geoscience, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, Manchester University, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
Abstract
AbstractNatural fractures control primary fluid flow in low-matrix-permeability carbonate hydrocarbon reservoirs, making it important to understand the factors that affect natural fracture distributions and networks. Away from the influence of folds and faults, stratigraphic controls are accepted to be the major control on fracture networks. The influence of carbonate nodular chert rhythmite successions on natural fracture networks is investigated here using a Discrete Element Modelling (DEM) technique that draws on outcrop observations of naturally fractured carbonates in the Eocene Thebes Formation, exposed in the west central Sinai of Egypt, that also form reservoir rocks in the subsurface. Stratally-bound chert nodules below bedding surfaces create lateral heterogeneities that vary over short distances. The resulting distribution of physical properties (differing stiffnesses) caused by chert rhythmites is shown to generate extra complexity in natural fracture networks in addition to that caused by bed thickness and lithological physical properties. Chert rhythmite successions need to be considered as a distinct type of carbonate fractured reservoir. Stratigraphic rules for predicting the distribution, lengths and spacing of natural fractures, and quantitative fracture indices (P11, P21, P22 and fractal dimension) are generated from the DEM outcomes. In a less-stiff carbonate medium, the presence of chert nodules reduces fracture intensity at chert horizons, and fractures per unit area are higher in chert-free vertical corridors. In a stiff carbonate medium, chert has little influence on fracture development. In a peritidal cyclic succession with constant layer thicknesses, the presence of chert in less-stiff carbonate horizons results in a reduction in fracture intensity. When chert is introduced in a subtidal cyclic sequence with constant layer thicknesses, it has little effect on fracture distribution. The study has widespread significance for characterizing naturally fractured reservoirs containing carbonate nodular chert rhythmites.
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Subject
Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology
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