00:00 | mhm Yeah. Yeah. Yes. . Mhm Yeah. Uh huh |
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00:53 | Mhm. Uh huh. Okay. . Uh huh. Strong. Uh |
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01:25 | . You want to come in Yeah. I just, I don't |
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01:29 | . They're in the hardware and it growing. Oh, it's questions I |
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01:37 | to let you in the meeting. , I just don't know what I |
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01:40 | want. Just going to this. , you're not. That is just |
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01:46 | to since go ahead. Yeah. , okay. Good. Yeah. |
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04:13 | . Mhm Yeah. Okay. Yeah, it's precious. So right |
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07:35 | . Mhm Yeah. Yeah. So . Okay. Here is our, |
|
07:49 | may be fascinating back so much. Right. Was a university student |
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08:11 | So as long as she didn't drop spoil it, it should be |
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08:26 | Yeah. Period car. Its Yes. Mhm Let's pick up |
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08:32 | yeah, precious. I actually got . Mm. Yes, but letter |
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08:45 | . Alright. If it all depends she, she lost it after. |
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08:49 | got here. Because if she was from sometimes she went from the |
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08:54 | So Uh huh percent. It's like narrow, Sorry. I feel like |
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09:08 | saw around so yeah. He still a really nice leverage or frequency still |
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09:21 | christian sense. What's that? Okay. All the profits. Uh |
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10:25 | I got a present split. Mhm. Okay. You can start |
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10:41 | massive just subject maybe. Yes. you do what you feel like you |
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10:51 | to do because you couldn't listen to on too. So Oh sure. |
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11:17 | . Well let's, we'll help her at our next break. Yeah. |
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11:25 | . Okay. We're going to continue discussion about the generally my critics sediments |
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11:31 | associated with the ramp interior platform interior the down the ramp areas in front |
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11:39 | the ramp crest. And we talked a couple of case studies from the |
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11:47 | in and the Mississippi in in the basin. Yeah. Let's move into |
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11:52 | cretaceous to south texas. You the lay of the land now with |
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11:56 | to the Edwards or serve city reef . It runs in this position right |
|
12:02 | . Uh, and then all of light blue area here represents the platform |
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12:06 | and most of this is low energy the critic carbonate except wherever there was |
|
12:11 | paleo topography created. And um you see there's some positive topography here. |
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12:17 | some negative topography, the old diagrams the Maverick basin, the Mcknight |
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12:22 | But that's basically the Maverick base and one of those introductory tonic baseball sags |
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12:28 | on the on the Creighton. And there's Atlanta uplift that we talked about |
|
12:34 | , I believe. Right so. so it's back in this setting |
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12:38 | that back in this factory setting where do have reservoir potential. And if |
|
12:47 | look at the Edwards in terms of uh mythologies, the reef that we |
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12:53 | about before made up of rudest is still limestone. And then notice that |
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12:59 | immediate back grief. So called back lagoon. Or really you should call |
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13:04 | the platform interior the more open uh part of the platform interior and brown |
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13:11 | limestone still. And then there's the zone here where you go into an |
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13:17 | in board that's all replaced by And of course the history for the |
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13:22 | of the stolen might is that it's to re flexing outside the town of |
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13:29 | in central texas, which is not far from to land uplift. There's |
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13:32 | active Corey where they mined gypsum and is thought to be the gypsum deposits |
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13:38 | thought to be the upkeep of appetite to the Edwards. Alright. And |
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13:42 | what was the model reflex model? . Foods that pretty fluids flowed down |
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13:48 | or down dip and dramatize the update of the trend but never reached this |
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13:53 | of the, the trend. And why it's still limestone. So |
|
13:57 | it's interesting. There are a couple old pools back here, Darts Creek |
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14:02 | Luling that were discovered back in the . They're still producing today, believe |
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14:07 | or not, they're still chugging along you probably have smelt the oil if |
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14:11 | ever driven from Houston to san Antonio if you stopped at bucky's just outside |
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14:17 | lou lanes. Right. You would the hydrocarbon in the air. That's |
|
14:21 | they discovered Darts Creek. It was a surface see. And and so |
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14:27 | pools are producing from dramatized fabric. of these pools and the ferocity looks |
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14:32 | this. It's a classical uh ferocity to uh replacement of a bi modal |
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14:39 | settlement. These were scalable ploy to and pack stones as we talked about |
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14:46 | Matrix got preferentially dramatized. And then the reasons we talked about before, |
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14:52 | larger scholar grains dissolved out to give this molding ferocity. Alright. And |
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14:58 | what I've always found impressive about these old oil old oil fields is the |
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15:04 | . I mean the reserves are Are much higher than you normally associate with |
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15:08 | a platform interior setting. I you know, 400 million 300 million |
|
15:13 | of oil in place. That's a pretty good. And you know, |
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15:18 | things are chugging away today if some these wells are just producing a few |
|
15:22 | a day, but they're still And and the other part of the |
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15:28 | is its fault and trapped, That these are sort of typical |
|
15:32 | down, down to the coast faults uh normal faults that trap some of |
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15:36 | uh ferocity. And mhm. Right. All right. And then |
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15:47 | into the Jurassic, we talked about um sands associated with the smack over |
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15:52 | along this area right here. But there are parts of this macro trend |
|
15:58 | Alabama where you don't get high energy sand body development. You know, |
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16:03 | low energy and payments of my critic political fabric. And the famous |
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16:09 | a famous oilfield example of that is J. Field X marks the |
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16:14 | And you can see the there's Alabama line. J. J. Feel |
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16:19 | of straddles the state line. And a it's a giant oil field |
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16:25 | And uh we talked a little bit some of the porosity. Remember |
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16:31 | Let me get rid of this We talked about this ferocity before member |
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16:39 | foreign ferocity. Early formed organisation. form ferocity secondary porosity and then preserved |
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16:46 | to 15,500 ft. Some of the are down to 16,000 ft um everybody |
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16:56 | the circular holes and assumes that those druids. But this is not a |
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17:00 | of the trend that was was suitable you. It's sand deposition. And |
|
17:06 | may have told you this, but worked for Exxon, this is always |
|
17:09 | of one of our core exercises that used in internal training. And you |
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17:13 | you could you could lay out a of course and show this transition from |
|
17:18 | that looks like this to the indolent political paxton. Right? So these |
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17:22 | political pack stones Dieter baited that we're host sediment to begin with and where |
|
17:27 | got favorably dramatized and dissolved out. develop this kind of ferocity. |
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17:33 | so that's another example of uh these cheerier, low energy democratic carbonates. |
|
17:42 | . Yeah. Yeah, same All right. So all the all |
|
17:55 | examples I've been showing you involve creation secondary porosity by dehumanization and this is |
|
18:02 | the kind of thing that companies would right looking for for scenarios for making |
|
18:08 | . You need to know though that another way to create secondary processing these |
|
18:12 | stones that does not involve dehumanization. this is a concept in the carbonate |
|
18:17 | called the diagnostic chalk. So the loggers used the term chalky for any |
|
18:23 | micro forest carbonate. Okay, but we're going to define chalk later |
|
18:30 | we use it specifically for the pelagic carbonates that have lots of global arenas |
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18:35 | coke lists and things like that. ? The plastic forums and the and |
|
18:39 | co colas. So this is sort a hybrid of that term. It's |
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18:44 | digex chalk because the rocks have a texture because they're highly micro forests. |
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18:51 | most of these deposits are not are deepwater carbonates, they're shallow water |
|
18:56 | That arm a critic that undergo favorable genesis, favorable secondary porosity development. |
|
19:02 | , there's no plastic microfossils and nana . So the question is, you |
|
19:08 | , how do you create the secondary ? Of course the carbonate community is |
|
19:12 | all over the board from early to and it's probably all three examples that |
|
19:17 | listed here depending on where you look right, because you could certainly have |
|
19:21 | dissolution related to conformity die genesis if have any reaganite in the system whether |
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19:27 | expose it or not you're going to that arrogant relatively early during shallow |
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19:32 | So that's another way as I showed to make secondary porosity, then, |
|
19:37 | think there are some good examples where of this process is created after this |
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19:41 | has already been buried into the realm pressure solution. So, I want |
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19:46 | to appreciate this is another way to secondary quality for both gas and oil |
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19:52 | in a subtitle or title flat related critic limestone. So the most famous |
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20:00 | of this kind of variation on this type is uh associate with a giant |
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20:07 | field called bahasa bahasa occurs in uh Dhabi. It's part of an onshore |
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20:15 | here. You can see the base one of these shallow integra tonic |
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20:19 | sort of like the maverick basis and we talked about in west texas extends |
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20:25 | from. All right. And there's production here along the margin baja's is |
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20:30 | giant oil field. It produces mostly rudest reef. So it would be |
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20:35 | example of a platform margin, rudest complex. Right. But what's interesting |
|
20:40 | these low energy critic carbonates that occur the reef margin. So these platform |
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20:46 | or lagoon. Oh, carbonates is you develop the digest chalk fabric. |
|
20:54 | . And this stuff produces oil. right. And they know it they |
|
20:58 | it produces oil because they commingle production this stuff with the principal reservoir |
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21:03 | which are the debris sheets like we about for most rudest reef complexes. |
|
21:08 | right. So, um, I'm saying that this is the major reason |
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21:15 | this being a giant oil field. ? Most of the ferocity, most |
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21:19 | obviously is coming out of this, I want you to appreciate that there |
|
21:23 | co mingle production coming out of the critic fabric. Alright. And this |
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21:27 | what the this is what the core the producing faces looks like for these |
|
21:32 | chalks. There are two sequences in Middle East, the Schweiber and the |
|
21:37 | Mama that produced from fabric. It like this. And you look at |
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21:41 | rock and Corey say what? That's . I mean, that looks my |
|
21:46 | and it looks by intubated and it's pressure solution. That's a classical modular |
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21:51 | we've been talking about. That's what when you buy at your bait first |
|
21:56 | then you bury it into the realm pressure solution. So, these are |
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21:59 | are whiskey micro style lights to just through here. All right. Uh |
|
22:04 | when you when you squirt a water , you take a water bottle and |
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22:07 | water on it sucks right in. incredible how fast it sucks water. |
|
22:12 | right. And when you thin section , you can see high degree of |
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22:17 | micro porosity. This blue hue that all through the rock here. That's |
|
22:21 | secondary micro buggy ferocity. That's dissolution democratic matrix by some sort of |
|
22:27 | Right. So the question is, it early? And that's all the |
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22:30 | genetic material dissolving out Or is it in later after everything's been stabilized to |
|
22:36 | . And you bring in the right of acidic fluid to dissolve it |
|
22:40 | All right. But this is what fabric looks like. All right. |
|
22:45 | there's no plastic microfossils. There's no list or anything like that. This |
|
22:50 | just dissolution. Re precipitation of the Matrix. You're basically just reorganizing a |
|
22:56 | of that fabric to give you a ferocity. Right. And it's interesting |
|
23:01 | stuff produces oil, right? And produces oil without the assistance of |
|
23:07 | So, and uh, the obvious is, well, why does it |
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23:13 | oil produces oil? Because it's high oil? It's like, I think |
|
23:19 | trying to think what the oil Think it's like 39 or 40 Audi |
|
23:25 | . It's pretty light oil. All right. And and clearly some |
|
23:31 | the dissolution is burial. Because you relationships like this where not only does |
|
23:36 | Matrix micro leech, but you see of the cal siddiq Malia's or foraminifera |
|
23:42 | you see here that large benthic foraminifera riddled with secondary micro ferocity. Of |
|
23:48 | the clincher as you see a stylized through here and you see ferocity cutting |
|
23:54 | style light and ferocity well preserved on sides of the style light. That |
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23:57 | a timing indicator that we talked right? That that process had to |
|
24:02 | after the style I tiff. It their first you would have preferentially cemented |
|
24:07 | along the style light. All So that's a that's a digex chalk |
|
24:12 | from the Middle East. That's the , that's the most famous example in |
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24:15 | literature and bringing you back to south . I want you to know that |
|
24:20 | two biggest gas fields in the Edwards word field or deal with field in |
|
24:26 | position right here and were filled over in Lavaca county. Uh, both |
|
24:33 | these, both of these pools are in low energy MMA. Critics subtitle |
|
24:41 | . They're basically digested chalks as But now these are gas reservoirs because |
|
24:45 | more deeply buried. Okay, so me show you the setting here. |
|
24:53 | turns out that, you know, Edwards trend, The reef trend that |
|
24:56 | talked about occurs obviously along the platform and you've got the grain stone debris |
|
25:01 | it. And then all of this low energy democratic carbonate, relatively close |
|
25:06 | the platform margin. There's a, a couple of false systems that run |
|
25:11 | that setting parallel to the platform And uh, these are, these |
|
25:17 | fall trends like addis cosa and uh the currents trough, we fall into |
|
25:24 | category. And uh, right there a number of these false systems in |
|
25:28 | texas. The line up parallel to platform margin. So you can see |
|
25:32 | the rockets dice is sliced and diced this position back here and word field |
|
25:39 | probably the best studied. We're certainly published on. There's not a lot |
|
25:44 | information about Word Field, but there a couple of papers have been published |
|
25:48 | this and They date back to the 80's before we even knew you could |
|
25:53 | barrel dissolution in any carbonate. so back then, the only way |
|
25:57 | need to create secondary porosity and any rock was to expose it to fresh |
|
26:03 | and have the Iraqi genetic fabric dissolve . All right. And so that |
|
26:07 | a model for word Field. They looked at it as basically like |
|
26:12 | have today off of the Everglades, of the Everglades. There's an area |
|
26:16 | florida bay and they're a bunch of mud banks there that are developed and |
|
26:22 | mud banks are building up above sea , right, little islands. And |
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26:26 | that was the model. Right? these mud banks build up above sea |
|
26:30 | . Get rained on to account for secondary porosity. Alright. And you |
|
26:34 | see you can see where it sits behind the rudest reef complex. So |
|
26:41 | the original gas in places over 800 8.5% ferocity course, low matrix firms |
|
26:49 | this is micro porosity dominated and of baker and scott and I know both |
|
26:57 | these people, they went, they this all to be early freshwater die |
|
27:02 | because that was the only model anybody back then. So, but when |
|
27:08 | look at look at what's been described you look at the some of the |
|
27:13 | that I'm going to show you for or Dilworth, they're very similar. |
|
27:18 | you start to see a lot of porosity related to leaching of calcium, |
|
27:24 | grains. And you see secondary porosity along where cutting style lights. Those |
|
27:28 | the red flags we talked about before indicate at least part of that porosity |
|
27:33 | created by barrel phenomenon. Right, pacific fluids. And then what I've |
|
27:40 | to pay attention to is the amount CO two associated with some of these |
|
27:45 | . The high CO two, I is a red flag as well for |
|
27:49 | dissolution. Right? You're dissolving Well, what are you going to |
|
27:53 | ? You generate Ceo too. So, the elevated content, maybe |
|
27:58 | red flag. That doesn't mean all two comes from carbonate dissolution. I'm |
|
28:02 | saying that, but I'm just saying something that you catch your attention and |
|
28:06 | brought you to look at the rocking little bit more detail. All |
|
28:10 | So, let me show you, worked deal worth a little bit more |
|
28:15 | I've looked at samples from from word . But this is a this is |
|
28:23 | sample. I think I mentioned that animal study that I did. I |
|
28:29 | I mentioned that yesterday. Right. we sampled all those, all the |
|
28:33 | and we took the plugs and we NMR. And then we've made thin |
|
28:36 | off the plug. So, this one of the samples From Dilworth and |
|
28:40 | can see 11,000 almost 500 ft burial ferocity. 8.5 million darcy's of |
|
28:50 | You do see the porosity, don't ? No, you don't believe |
|
28:54 | do you? You don't believe there's ferocity there. Now. Do you |
|
28:58 | me? Okay, white paper. is why we use the white paper |
|
29:05 | . All right, right. Officer . We were offsetting the shallow |
|
29:17 | Yeah. Look what you pick up this view that you didn't see easily |
|
29:25 | that view. Alright. The style , you're actually looking up at the |
|
29:30 | light is coming up at you like . The teeth like structures. And |
|
29:35 | , the preservation of secondary microprocessor. cutting like you see here or preserved |
|
29:40 | both sides, indicates again, barrel . And then what else do you |
|
29:46 | here in these rocks? You have these other exotic styles of mineralization. |
|
29:51 | have fluoride that we talked about It's icy tropic as you see |
|
29:55 | It turns completely black under cross Uh mega courts. Again, we |
|
30:00 | about the significance of that. basement derived in acidic fluid. We |
|
30:05 | saddle Dolomites which are definitive barrel but they're leached. So you needed |
|
30:12 | enough fluid deletes that saddle dolomite as . All right. So, so |
|
30:16 | of this suggests again that this is , This is not only digest chocolate |
|
30:20 | probably full control. Again, tied to reactivate a basement falls to account |
|
30:25 | the mineralization and the barrel dissolution. , All right, then. |
|
30:35 | 1 last example here. Bring you to the central basin platform to show |
|
30:39 | what happens on the other side potentially the ramp crest as you go on |
|
30:43 | seaward side. And you go slowly into deeper water. As soon as |
|
30:48 | get below fair weather wave base, into an area of accumulation of uh |
|
30:53 | critics sediment, but you're not into deep water basin yet. So, |
|
30:57 | famous example of that kind of play is Seminole field, which occurs up |
|
31:03 | in Gaines County. All right. we talked about vacuum yesterday for grain |
|
31:09 | and Seminole sits right there. It's giant oil field. And yeah, |
|
31:20 | , it's a giant oil field. you can see it's it's made |
|
31:25 | The main producing zone is shown in here. And uh there's a residual |
|
31:32 | zone below that. And of course is non productive up here. All |
|
31:35 | . And actually my first, my major consulting project was was working this |
|
31:44 | . I was hired uh by three has Arco and Marathon. They've gone |
|
31:55 | uh they uh had gone to water and typically the water flood busted because |
|
32:04 | didn't understand the internal geometry. They thousands of feet of core. All |
|
32:11 | . So, I was hired to all the core, which is like |
|
32:14 | ft of core. I mean this took me maybe took me maybe eight |
|
32:19 | and half the time I spent in describing the core out of marathons lab |
|
32:25 | and then come back to Houston work the thin sections and verify the |
|
32:30 | I wasn't doing a digex that I just trying to set up the street |
|
32:34 | fee and the cyclist city and relate the porosity is in the good |
|
32:40 | All right. So, and the that produces along this ramp trend ramp |
|
32:47 | is just this one faces belt right with a few Selena's. All |
|
32:52 | So vacuum field you saw that the . Is produced. Okay. We'll |
|
32:56 | the words don't produce because they're all with and hydrates cement. There's no |
|
33:03 | . And the title flat here had permeability to because they had financial |
|
33:08 | but that's plugged. But they All right. So, there's a |
|
33:11 | of plugging of the of the ferocity an hydrate, but the few Selena |
|
33:16 | produce. All right. And this what the rock fabric looks like. |
|
33:21 | right. So, the only thing produces in this trend is rock that |
|
33:26 | like this. These are the few pack stones and sometimes wacky stones that |
|
33:32 | replaced by dolomite. All right. the brown color is oil stain. |
|
33:38 | the only time this stuff produces is the few Selena's are not that dissolved |
|
33:43 | And you don't have a lot of and hydrate. Okay. But when |
|
33:48 | have more and hydrate in the you get a greater degree of dissolved |
|
33:53 | few Selena's essays holes here. But what happens when you dissolve the |
|
33:59 | that dolomite goes back into solution? precipitates as poor filling cement here? |
|
34:04 | . So, you see in this , you had a lot more for |
|
34:07 | in perm in the matrix. And , it's all tight. Everything's |
|
34:11 | Even though you still have good these samples could show comparable Prosise on |
|
34:17 | , Right? But this is the one that yields hydrocarbon, and this |
|
34:21 | never produces hydrocarbon. All right. it's the damnedest thing I've ever seen |
|
34:27 | my life. In terms of the between these two fabrics, sometimes in |
|
34:32 | bore hole and a core, You go from 46 to 47 or the |
|
34:37 | way around vertically. And to be sharp contact or transitional contact. Sometimes |
|
34:44 | you look at a core, half core look like 46, half the |
|
34:47 | look like 47 that way with either or sharp contacts. And sometimes in |
|
34:54 | borehole, you'd see the contact at angle. I mean, I've never |
|
34:58 | anything like that ever again. And worked lots of villas tone sequences. |
|
35:02 | uh but I think here, I the story here is one of of |
|
35:08 | decolonization first and then later dissolution controlled how much and hydrate comes into the |
|
35:16 | . We have more and hydrate, see this kind of ferocity developed where |
|
35:19 | whole grain dissolves out, where you have as much and hydrate, you |
|
35:22 | get a little bit of dole of dissolution. You hold onto that permeability |
|
35:26 | that was the key. All And then of course, all of |
|
35:30 | , this is actually burial dissolution. thinks he's everybody thinks these Dolomites formed |
|
35:36 | early. But you can see some these grains are already future together before |
|
35:41 | get dramatized. So this is burial , This is burial and hydrate coming |
|
35:46 | . Everybody thought this is early and to begin with. And then of |
|
35:50 | the dissolution starts out dissolving the crystals replace the few cylinders and then it |
|
35:56 | to this fabric. Right here. right, So, okay, that's |
|
36:01 | sideline. I wasn't hard to do dye genesis, but and I didn't |
|
36:04 | understand this when I was doing the . I observed it, but I |
|
36:07 | understand it Because back then this is 80s, right. Nobody knew that |
|
36:13 | Mike would would dissolve out on a scale. Everybody thought dolomite was pretty |
|
36:18 | and should never dissolve out. Of we've thrown that out the window. |
|
36:22 | right. Yeah. Shoot, I know. Um I mean, they |
|
36:31 | have any in a more stuff, Process back in the 80s when that |
|
36:37 | a very popular tool either. So . Mhm. Yeah, mm. |
|
36:50 | maybe, I don't know. I , I'm not I mean M. |
|
36:54 | . And M. Are supposed to detect the difference between macro and micro |
|
36:59 | . Both of them have a decent porosity, Right? Because you can |
|
37:05 | the ferocity, it's not like it's micro porosity and one or the |
|
37:09 | So I don't know which one I that I don't know if they had |
|
37:23 | I'm sure they had some SPS on older wells, but uh I don't |
|
37:29 | . I never got this is a issue, right? You never get |
|
37:35 | access to all the data when you're the work. Right? So I |
|
37:39 | have logs to go with all the that I looked at. So I |
|
37:42 | really got to see that. I just told by the engineer that they |
|
37:46 | tell the difference on logs between 46 47, okay. There is no |
|
37:54 | huh. Okay, well, let's let me summarize then. What we've |
|
38:01 | talked about, right, we're in more restricted subtitle or title flat environment |
|
38:06 | associated with the ramp interior setting or , interior setting or possibly down the |
|
38:12 | of the ramp crest as you go deeper water basin. Alright. And |
|
38:16 | reservoir quality almost always has to be on favourable die genesis, Most people |
|
38:22 | it's dull immunization has to come into , but I've showed you another way |
|
38:25 | do this, right? This digest and and we have diabetic shocks that |
|
38:31 | all the way back to the All right, So this is not |
|
38:34 | not limited to these. I showed , you know, at mesozoic |
|
38:40 | but there's also some examples in the . Right? And then don't forget |
|
38:46 | that there can be some production from porosity in these title flat systems with |
|
38:52 | because of the financial prostate you're going see for judy creek when we talk |
|
38:56 | that next week. Next friday that there is local production from these tidal |
|
39:01 | that produce sometimes from financial porosity. good news again is uh the reservoirs |
|
39:08 | are usually stacked, right? And traps are strata graphic. And that |
|
39:13 | seals would be the time equivalent dense , writes or evaporates. And |
|
39:18 | I said, source could be a of potential could be an issue if |
|
39:22 | way back from the open ocean. if that's where your kitchen is |
|
39:26 | somewhere out in the deeper basin and examples. Okay. Alright. Any |
|
39:33 | questions or comments about uh that All right, well, let's go |
|
39:42 | one more plate type and then we'll a little break. Uh This is |
|
39:47 | Last of the five conventional play types I listed so called basal or down |
|
39:52 | ramp mound carbonates. Alright, these are depending on geological age. |
|
39:58 | can vary from the classical pinnacle reefs are up to over 1000 ft |
|
40:04 | To the low relief buildups. We in the upper paleozoic involving crying noise |
|
40:08 | bright zones or Phil Lloyd algae. , so the age influences the scale |
|
40:14 | the build up. All right, here's the schematic cartoon, right? |
|
40:19 | we're into the basin, but were in the deep parts of the |
|
40:22 | So don't get the impression that we out in the middle of the |
|
40:26 | Almost all of these build ups, there's pinnacle reefs or the low relief |
|
40:31 | occur and that transition zone from the to the deeper part of the |
|
40:37 | Right? So either down the ramp I guess you could say sort of |
|
40:42 | slope setting before you get to really water. That's where these plays tend |
|
40:46 | develop. All right, but not in the middle of a deep water |
|
40:51 | . Alright, and remember I showed this seismic yesterday we were talking about |
|
40:56 | expression of carbonates and I made the about ramps. What happens to ramps |
|
41:01 | you go more and more distal, start to roll over a little bit |
|
41:05 | of increased subsidence. And it's this little inflection point here that oftentimes in |
|
41:12 | ramp model is where you nuclear hate down ramp or down slow build |
|
41:17 | right. Whether they're pinnacle reefs or of the low relief buildups we have |
|
41:21 | the upper paleozoic. So let's just right into some of the examples |
|
41:27 | First examples from the Devonian of Western there are five carbonate mega sequences that |
|
41:34 | in Western Canada that are oil and productive. And the uppermost one is |
|
41:41 | Dennis Q. There's no, I'm , not the uppermost one, but |
|
41:46 | second to the youngest is called Dennis . All right. And it is |
|
41:52 | related carbonate deposition. And you can there the Again, I would not |
|
41:59 | the term shelf anymore. Right. is old terminology from the 60s but |
|
42:04 | carried through to the paper in the shame on them. But basically this |
|
42:10 | a ramp deepening up to the All right. So Winterburn basin is |
|
42:15 | deepwater equivalent to the ramp. And is that transition zone where you go |
|
42:20 | like this, you start to roll , you get this fairway of pinnacle |
|
42:25 | . All right. So the two areas are brazo and pomona. And |
|
42:31 | course this play was not discovered until mid 1960s. by Old two |
|
42:35 | Data, Nobody knew these were reservoirs they stumbled on this back in the |
|
42:42 | . And of course was excuse what's the play concept was developed? |
|
42:47 | is just a matter of shooting a enough grid of two D. Seismic |
|
42:51 | to find all of these plays. they were all discovered within a couple |
|
42:54 | years. All right. And you know, usually in the |
|
42:59 | you think in terms of reef builders being strong atop roids, but sometimes |
|
43:04 | are tabulate corals? All right. the tablet corals where the corals |
|
43:09 | Mostly horizontal across partitions. And you , we see him in vertical orientation |
|
43:16 | . That's in growth position. And this is, this is one of |
|
43:21 | reefs is still limestone and anybody know this is. But between the corals |
|
43:31 | kind of cement? Cloudy. That's my critic. Its crystalline. It's |
|
43:42 | cloudy color. Well, sorry, sites were never cloudy. Right. |
|
43:50 | was the only kind of cement that cloudy hurry marines amount? Right. |
|
43:55 | some sort of marines amount. And you can see this little closer with |
|
43:59 | hand lens, you could maybe you sort of see a fibers habit to |
|
44:03 | . So those are those icy pakis , trying to be little fan shaped |
|
44:09 | in places where the pores are Okay. And so it turns out |
|
44:14 | limestone, these lime stones are rarely reservoirs. These are their marine cemented |
|
44:20 | you see here or they trapped right. Because they also act as |
|
44:25 | stones sometimes write a little bit deeper . And so you'll get mud in |
|
44:30 | . So no permeability, even though corals have ferocity. Right? Corals |
|
44:35 | calcification member. These are devonian. all the corals in the paleozoic are |
|
44:39 | . They're not going to leach out . Right, during burial. So |
|
44:45 | do you have to do? You to delimit ties. Right. So |
|
44:47 | the reservoirs in this trend look like . The matrix preferentially dramatized. And |
|
44:55 | the corals bleached out. You can to the court warehouse in Calgary and |
|
45:00 | them pull out these cores like You can pick up a chunk, |
|
45:03 | like this this long and you can from one end to the other like |
|
45:08 | telescope. You're looking down the dissolved . Okay, So look at the |
|
45:14 | for this sample. 1.5 For the permeability is 1.5 Darcy's all right for |
|
45:20 | play because of this kind of Alright, so, again, this |
|
45:25 | the beauty of dramatizing some of this fabric. Right? You create that |
|
45:30 | excellent permeability. All right. That's upper that's more upper devonian in Western |
|
45:37 | . It's interesting that the oldest of five sequences, which is called keg |
|
45:41 | , also has clinical brief development but stream atop roids. Okay, so |
|
45:49 | the same kind of setting. We're off the shallow water carbonate platforms and |
|
45:54 | off into these isolated little sub basins northwestern part of Alberta. And you |
|
46:00 | see the pinnacle reefs develop in this right here before you get into deeper |
|
46:05 | and they start off as vertical If they stay like that, it |
|
46:09 | takes one will to develop something like . But clearly some of these things |
|
46:15 | into bigger scale structures and some of take on an atoll morphology like you |
|
46:20 | expressed here Where it takes four or wells to develop. Okay. And |
|
46:26 | of these also did what they built the sea level because they're capped by |
|
46:31 | or tidal flats and that are a for paleo sea level right? Within |
|
46:36 | few feet. That tells us where level was. Right. And so |
|
46:40 | the evolution here? The evolution is than what we saw in shallow |
|
46:45 | Right. We saw things changed this across the mature reef. And these |
|
46:50 | , they start in deeper water and do what they change vertically through |
|
46:54 | Right? So you start off deposition on Criminal Lloyd's. That's the |
|
47:00 | These little criminal banks are the And it turns out that three |
|
47:04 | seismic shows that a lot of these are there because of reactivated basement |
|
47:10 | So that kick kicks off the initial chrono is on top of that, |
|
47:14 | there, a little deeper water. then what do you find on top |
|
47:17 | that in the dark blue? The corals. Right. And then the |
|
47:23 | atop rights come in and then they characters. They go up right to |
|
47:28 | shallowness and changes in energy. So start changing their morphology like we talked |
|
47:34 | before. So the donation is vertical in a platform margin reef, the |
|
47:40 | would be lateral or horizontal. And you can see the kinds of |
|
47:47 | is here, 6800 ft is pretty . Some of these reef complexes get |
|
47:53 | to 1000 ft thick. Okay. they have excellent uh seismic expression on |
|
47:59 | D. Data. I showed you two d. data yesterday where there |
|
48:02 | a lot more subtle that you in two D. They picked it |
|
48:06 | from the drape effect in the slave . But here on three D. |
|
48:10 | not hard to miss this. that's the build up right there. |
|
48:20 | guess you could say that's a little of a sag. Right? I |
|
48:27 | you could say pull down, but the sag is the when it |
|
48:33 | that's supposed to be, that's supposed mean the build up is more porous |
|
48:38 | pull up like that would be the way around where it's tighter. So |
|
48:42 | . Okay. Now look at just these color patterns. He, even |
|
48:48 | this is an old diagram, I I really like this diagram because it |
|
48:52 | you what we see time and time with respect to decolonization and ferocity |
|
48:58 | Almost always there's a faces control and quality even if it gets stolen |
|
49:03 | Okay, so just compare the color here for deposition all faces with the |
|
49:09 | faces after decolonization. I think you see a very strong Relationship between the |
|
49:15 | . That's just telling you that the reservoir quality is faces control. |
|
49:20 | And this is this is not that . In fact, in my experience |
|
49:24 | is pretty common. There's a reason some of these rocks are dramatized and |
|
49:28 | because of underlying faces control, Which what you want to see, |
|
49:32 | Because that's what you want to try map or extend in terms of extent |
|
49:38 | the subsurface. Right? And then last example in the salary in the |
|
49:46 | basin example that we talked about a bit yesterday. Same relationship here we're |
|
49:51 | . We're coming off the carbonate It's along that, that transitional zone |
|
49:56 | forceps zone where you see the fairways pinnacle reefs And these pinnacle reefs again |
|
50:01 | the scale of 400 to 600 ft . And you can see they're encased |
|
50:06 | deep water carbonate. A one carbonate we talked about yesterday was a source |
|
50:12 | With only an average toc of And then it gets encased in the |
|
50:18 | to evaporate, which is a basic evaporate. And of course, that |
|
50:23 | for sure the closure, right? strata graphic entrapment of the oil. |
|
50:27 | some people think it's also the source the magnesium fluids that dramatize the |
|
50:32 | Right? That would be a variation , based on the watering instead of |
|
50:37 | it up, dip, squeeze it the adjacent reef complex during burial. |
|
50:43 | , all I can tell you is these physicals have to be dillaman ties |
|
50:46 | be productive. Alright. And and no guarantee every dramatized one is going |
|
50:52 | be productive. But sometimes the process plugged by, uh, evaporates either |
|
50:59 | or hey or hey, light. I don't know of any limestone examples |
|
51:04 | produce. All right. So, have to dramatize this stuff and presumably |
|
51:08 | by squeezing those magnesium rich grinds into adjacent pinnacle reef from the deep water |
|
51:15 | . All right. Nothing. No of the time. Our strategy doesn't |
|
51:22 | to be injured for all guests. . These only occur in the shallow |
|
51:30 | atomic basins. Alright. You never him in a really deep water |
|
51:33 | Okay. You can see them in transition zone as you go into deeper |
|
51:37 | basins. Well, I mean, show you example of that in the |
|
51:41 | when we get to Southeast Asia. , so yes, it can be |
|
51:45 | . It could be a restricted integrate basins. Like I've been showing you |
|
51:49 | for Canada and the salary in But it can be in that transition zone |
|
51:54 | more open marine deep water setting. right. So that will come in |
|
52:00 | minute. All right. Let's just our way up from the lower |
|
52:05 | Look into the uh, but for , right. The Mississippi and through |
|
52:13 | aged sequences. These are this is time period where you don't have organisms |
|
52:19 | of producing high energy platform, marginal . Right. So, the build |
|
52:23 | tend to be associated with the So, in the Mississippi in the |
|
52:29 | fauna are crying noise, bright zones these big foraminifera including the fuselage needs |
|
52:34 | we've talked about before. All They trap sediment they build and they |
|
52:38 | buildups but they don't make great vertical alright. And they occur in relatively |
|
52:45 | water, lower energy. Right? order to account for the entrapment of |
|
52:49 | . A critic fabric. So there a bunch of examples here and I'll |
|
52:53 | about a couple of these famous examples the Williston basin. I'll show |
|
52:58 | I think an example from the western here in a minute. All |
|
53:03 | The outcrop analog is the one you here from New Mexico. This is |
|
53:09 | Muleshoe mountain. And if you you know where Alamogordo is? North |
|
53:17 | of white sands National Monument. If drive down one of the highways from |
|
53:24 | and you can you can get this without climbing up here. I mean |
|
53:27 | climb up here, you can do . I've done it. It's not |
|
53:32 | . It takes all day to do too. But but what you see |
|
53:37 | is the typical geometry of these build , right? These are loaf shaped |
|
53:41 | bread love shaped buildups, right little And they're made up of always made |
|
53:47 | of 2.2 parts the so called Right? That's the baffle stone |
|
53:54 | That's where you had a greater percentage in situ in this case cry noise |
|
53:58 | bright zones and then you have flanking bets and you can see some of |
|
54:02 | betting an outcrop. Alright. And of the stuff built up close to |
|
54:08 | level, but not to where you tidal flats or beaches. If you |
|
54:13 | up here on the top of of this mountain, right here on |
|
54:16 | seaward side, you see all of bright zones lineup like this, the |
|
54:22 | rate. Remember the fan shaped reasons all line up like this parallel to |
|
54:28 | to the C word, margin of , of that building. They're almost |
|
54:32 | the modern day see fans that occur the seaward edge of the reefs. |
|
54:37 | ? So that's suggesting that you're building into some energetic conditions, but |
|
54:42 | I've never seen anybody show where these actually build up to tidal flats or |
|
54:47 | . So, but I don't know they couldn't in some, some |
|
54:51 | Right? But look at the 100 m, that's pretty typical. |
|
54:55 | probably on the high side. And thickness is controlled by where you're at |
|
55:00 | the de positional profile. So if down dip with greater subsidence, you |
|
55:04 | a Muleshoe, if you're up several miles up dip, you get |
|
55:09 | low relief buildups, it might be of meters thick to maybe 20 or |
|
55:13 | m sick. Okay, That's controlled substance effects along, along that ramp |
|
55:21 | . Okay, so the processes that into play here, obviously, you |
|
55:28 | , there's there is potential for some imitation associated with these build ups. |
|
55:35 | then the question is, they do secondary porosity. So, what controls |
|
55:39 | ? Of course, the old literature it's all freshwater die genesis, which |
|
55:43 | absolutely no sense. Because what are constituents? They're all cal siddiq, |
|
55:48 | , criminals are calcite, forums are , bright zones or calcite. So |
|
55:53 | going to dissolve? So, I if you have any limestone buildups that |
|
55:57 | secondary porosity, that's probably going to burial dissolution, right? Sometimes they |
|
56:02 | demonetized. That's not unusual. And course they can get fractured too to |
|
56:07 | , enhanced the permeability. Alright, of the problems that you have to |
|
56:12 | about in the upper paleozoic is, your buildups dominated by Quran Lloyd's or |
|
56:17 | ? If there's lots of crying lloyds you see in this photograph here, |
|
56:22 | what happens to those crying lloyds when get buried, any dissolving calcite wants |
|
56:28 | latch onto that. Cry annoyed is overgrowth cement. And so you can |
|
56:33 | quickly cement up some of this principle fabric and lose the reservoir quality. |
|
56:38 | , that's the risk that you'd have think about. All right. |
|
56:43 | a couple of field examples here, , the famous one is the most |
|
56:48 | one is probably Dickinson field in Williston . Um This is found by by |
|
56:56 | . All right, In the mid , nobody knew this place existed in |
|
56:59 | Williston Basin. Kanako had been producing update plays. And what do they |
|
57:06 | , like all companies do. They extending their expiration further down dip, |
|
57:10 | ? They kept shooting deeper, seismic, further down slope. And |
|
57:16 | stumbled on these low relief mounts. right. And so now there are |
|
57:20 | whole host of these things that have discovered and are producing and Dickinson is |
|
57:26 | the most studied. Yeah. Not study in great detail, I |
|
57:31 | but at least Konica published on on of the aspects of Dickinson fields. |
|
57:36 | here's the summary. You can see scale is comparable to the outcrop |
|
57:41 | I just showed you about a 100 thick and moderately deeply buried. You |
|
57:46 | see the faces. The the mound is dominated by bright zones baffle stone |
|
57:52 | . The flank beds are a mixture crime, noise and bright zones. |
|
57:56 | inter mountain areas are where you get sponges with the church modules and things |
|
58:00 | that's pretty tight. And so in example, the reservoir is associated with |
|
58:07 | core and not the flanking beds and examples. It's the flanking beds have |
|
58:12 | better reservoir quality and in some examples produce. Okay, so don't be |
|
58:19 | if one is one produces and one . All right. So you can |
|
58:23 | the numbers here and again, these not incredibly big reserves because the build |
|
58:31 | is not that big, but, appreciate again, the ultimate recovery efficiency |
|
58:36 | pretty high. All right. All . That's that's the Mississippian. And |
|
58:42 | , Williston basin. And then there's which is down here. And then |
|
58:48 | another area up here called the Peace and payment and and uh can remember |
|
58:58 | Columbia. This area here that this Alberta and there's a pool there called |
|
59:06 | formation is called the pakis Co And the the seal area is productive |
|
59:16 | the debris sheets of materials that don't off of some of these buildups. |
|
59:22 | this is a interesting build up because heavy oil as well. All |
|
59:28 | And here's the data for the seal and and and and this and in |
|
59:36 | . Sorry, I misspoke not british . And you can see again, |
|
59:41 | scale is comparable thickness to what we about for the crab. And you |
|
59:46 | see it's not very deeply buried. right. And it has the same |
|
59:50 | we talked about. Most of production again from the prenatal Pakistan's and grain |
|
59:57 | that either are parts of the flanking or part of a capping limestone unit |
|
60:03 | top of the build up. And you get production from inter particle |
|
60:07 | You get production from some shelter Get production from primary intra particle and |
|
60:13 | there is some dissolution here as All right. Look at the api |
|
60:18 | . I mean api gravity is described that 11° oil is described as sort |
|
60:26 | like a oil like uh honey. right. So it comes out of |
|
60:34 | rock, but it doesn't come out fast. That's basically what I'm |
|
60:38 | All right. So, here's just to see what the rocks look like |
|
60:42 | , we're going to start down ramp the deeper water part of the trend |
|
60:46 | , you can see the mormon critic . Uh, I think that's part |
|
60:51 | a shirt nodule that's associated with See the pressure solution here. This |
|
60:56 | is non productive. Then you come onto the middle part of the ramp |
|
61:01 | . These are some of the flanking beds. You can see the Quran |
|
61:05 | , you can see some of the , preserve some of that process. |
|
61:08 | secondary due to dissolution of the It'll fabric and then here's the |
|
61:13 | It'll sand body system associated with part that build up. And then there's |
|
61:22 | equivalent to this annuity shoal. So uptick equivalent is actually a new, |
|
61:25 | old, but that has some ferocity . So, uh, it could |
|
61:30 | that some of these build ups actually up to sea level and you get |
|
61:33 | good souls on top. You're going see that that's not unusual when, |
|
61:37 | we get to the pennsylvania here in minute, I'll show you where that |
|
61:41 | actually pretty common to go from these ups to you and sand back into |
|
61:46 | up back to you and sand. right. What do people talk about |
|
61:50 | to a grief to it. All . Very, very typical in the |
|
61:54 | record all the way back to the . All right, Okay. So |
|
62:00 | let's serve let me finish up the . You're with the pennsylvania. Downslope |
|
62:06 | . Remember pennsylvania is the time period the fileted algae appear. They only |
|
62:11 | for the pennsylvania and part of the and then they're gone. We don't |
|
62:15 | exactly what Phil and algae are, we suspect they're related to calculus green |
|
62:20 | . And I think pretty clearly there and magnetic. And so they're always |
|
62:24 | to be prone by whatever mechanism to or re crystallization. Alright, so |
|
62:30 | biggest field example involving the development of mounded buildups is anise field in the |
|
62:38 | corners area of the US. Where colorado Utah New Mexico and Arizona |
|
62:46 | . Right? And yeah, you see the the scale here. This |
|
62:55 | a pretty big field, sorry. you can see again the two elements |
|
63:00 | we've been talking about. There's always reef corer, right? Made up |
|
63:04 | the solid algal wacky stones, to stones, to baffle stones. And |
|
63:09 | a cap into a lot of grain . And this just repeats over and |
|
63:13 | again. So there's production out of limestone and dolomite ties mountain cores. |
|
63:19 | production out of the politic material. , this gives you a feel for |
|
63:23 | numbers. And you can see that's good production here. That's almost 300 |
|
63:29 | barrels of oil over about a 22 period. And then about two 280 |
|
63:35 | of gas. All right, So the cartoon in the literature that shows |
|
63:40 | the settings. So we're coming off a shallow water carbonate platform to the |
|
63:46 | and we're ramping in basically into one the shallow, intricate tonic basin. |
|
63:52 | , same setting we've been talking So what initiates first is the philadelphia |
|
63:58 | build up. Of course everybody thinks are really deep water because there but |
|
64:03 | but they can't be deep water because if Phil Lloyd algae need they need |
|
64:07 | . Right. I mean the modern calculus algae go down to 70 |
|
64:11 | So I'll give you that kind of depth. I won't give you hundreds |
|
64:15 | meters of water depth in which to these kinds of build ups. |
|
64:20 | And you know, you're not too because look what happens. You evolved |
|
64:23 | the build up into a new little on top. Alright, so that |
|
64:28 | you two Things. First of it tells you you weren't that deep |
|
64:32 | begin with in order to build up the woods. And then what would |
|
64:36 | the likely driver for an isolated integrate basin like this? Probably the trade |
|
64:41 | . Right. And not title So All right. So that's famous |
|
64:49 | . And then we have other examples this along an area called the horseshoe |
|
64:54 | tall that occurs in the northern part the midland basin Here's the central basin |
|
64:59 | that we've been talking about. And this is the so called eastern shelf |
|
65:05 | of the middle and basin. And a structure up to the north called |
|
65:10 | of course you a tall. All . And I skipped over one slide |
|
65:15 | your slide set that shows the Is that pretty clearly controlled by basement |
|
65:21 | ? The fabric. Okay. And look at all the pools are developed |
|
65:27 | in red. Most of them are the eastern side and along the edge |
|
65:32 | that structure. All right. And the paleo trade wind direction? I |
|
65:38 | , yes. Can you go back this time in the Pennsylvania and you're |
|
65:42 | 15° north of the equator. so this has been a strong easterly |
|
65:46 | wind built. And so it sort makes sense that you have a bunch |
|
65:50 | them here and also makes sense that could have some on the other side |
|
65:54 | right catching the wind effect. Um not being affected by off bank transportation |
|
66:00 | the center part of that, so at all is relatively deep. All |
|
66:05 | . That's a big structure. I , look at the scale, That's |
|
66:08 | 60, 70 miles across for All right. So three d. |
|
66:14 | sort of shows you how this is put together sack rock is probably the |
|
66:19 | pool associated with the eastern side of horseshoe at all. Um This is |
|
66:24 | cross section through that to show you cyclist city. I mean these |
|
66:30 | yeah, these are like sub units the canyon formation. Then the cisco |
|
66:36 | on top of that. But basically you're seeing here are these stacked repetitive |
|
66:41 | like I showed you for. Uh with you go from build up to |
|
66:49 | . It's or build up to criminal stone and it repeats over and over |
|
66:54 | . Right? You go Phil I'd to its philadelphia gee to criminal brain |
|
66:59 | . So, so when it's fileted , I can show you what the |
|
67:05 | quality looks like and what it doesn't like. All right. So the |
|
67:09 | is non reservoir. And you can what you see. The problem here |
|
67:14 | this fabric is the baffle stone fabric highly my critic, right? You |
|
67:19 | the film Lloyd algae are the little potato chip like fabrics, there's some |
|
67:23 | corals here mixed in. There's no . Okay, all the reservoir quality |
|
67:29 | has to be generated by demonization or favorable secondary limestone dissolution. And that's |
|
67:36 | example on the right here where you see the McCready carbonate has been dissolved |
|
67:41 | to give you this tan color. everything is tan color is highly for |
|
67:47 | dominated by a mixture of macron's secondary . And you can see some of |
|
67:51 | cuts the style lights or is preserved the style light on either side. |
|
67:56 | some of this process is barrel But some of the processes early form |
|
68:01 | it's related to the film Lloyd So, these used to be a |
|
68:05 | of blades of Phil Lloyd allergy. can see the Mc right envelope that |
|
68:10 | the grains. You can see the ferocity here. This is not barrel |
|
68:14 | solution. This is early dissolution, ? Because it's a magnetic. So |
|
68:19 | due to exposure to fresh water or shallow burial, this fabric will dissolve |
|
68:25 | , but then superimposed on that is phase of deep barrel dissolution for some |
|
68:29 | these pools. Okay. And you see this, I think really nicely |
|
68:35 | you back to the horseshoe. A This is an old mobile field called |
|
68:40 | Creek field. And it produces from crime, total lime stones and Hewlett |
|
68:47 | stones. All right, The it'll stuff looks like this. |
|
68:52 | In fact, some of these are of prenatal buildups right? Where they |
|
68:56 | as a baffle stone. And then of this material is the debris which |
|
69:00 | the flanking beds. But look at I want you to take away from |
|
69:04 | is look at the, look at grains, their suit you together. |
|
69:09 | cranberries are sitting together, right? then look at the corrosion of some |
|
69:15 | these grains here. That that shouldn't . All right, unless you have |
|
69:19 | dissolution barrel barrel pressure solution to account that. And then some corrosion and |
|
69:26 | account for that ferocity. They're all . Because these are criminals they should |
|
69:31 | pretty stable. They should be pretty preserve. They should also be preferentially |
|
69:37 | up early. But here, they're . All right. They just underwent |
|
69:40 | solution. And then you have other Critics fabric here. But again, |
|
69:47 | don't appreciate the scale of the paparazzi you look at the look at these |
|
69:51 | sections with the white paper technique. , there's the few selected here, |
|
69:57 | is this fuselage it right here. mean, look at all this porosity |
|
70:02 | . You see a little bit of here in this lower photograph. And |
|
70:05 | course, you don't see much if of the micro porosity in the MMA |
|
70:10 | matrix. Same point over here. . And then look at all the |
|
70:14 | at all this micro porosity riddled with skylights. None of that makes any |
|
70:19 | . Unless that's barrel dissolution. So, I just want you to |
|
70:24 | that they're different pathways for creating secondary in some of these uh these kinds |
|
70:29 | build ups. Alright. And then last example here, we can see |
|
70:34 | extent extensive dissolution of the Matrix and Quran Oid. You can see the |
|
70:39 | lights again, sort of floating in highly micro forests the critic Matrix. |
|
70:48 | . And then this field is capped a little grain stone. Right. |
|
70:51 | you went from reef in this case dominated or build up to the wood |
|
70:56 | stones. Right. So that tells you can't be too terribly deep when |
|
71:01 | start that prenatal build up fabric. . Yeah. All right. You |
|
71:08 | doing okay. Take a little It's a good time to take a |
|
71:13 | . All right, let me pause guests and much more Yeah dude. |
|
71:32 | yes. Yeah. 10 minutes. , so just stretching off. Tess |
|
71:44 | has always been that's it. I they're inserting they hooked up at the |
|
71:58 | . Yeah. Hotel has hotels always probably places stop. Yeah. Uh |
|
72:17 | That's all the results of reserving but always concerning. Yeah. Yeah. |
|
72:31 | sure this is always that for the thoughts. three or 4. It |
|
72:41 | the biggest, the biggest here. very smallest. Uh huh sequence. |
|
77:08 | there. What very from the places of I see. Yes, they |
|
77:22 | go you roll over so Right, think maybe. Yeah. Well |
|
78:41 | that's what he's a beauty or The whole excited for an alarm. |
|
78:51 | it. Yeah. Big questions. was just saying and follow it. |
|
79:32 | see the infra back on close towards toilet. Words on she said that |
|
79:41 | had a dog. Yeah. thanks this year as a hostile |
|
81:10 | Mhm Okay. Mhm. Mhm Right. Yeah. Yeah. Mhm |
|
82:11 | , so sweater some smaller. Mhm of knows where she yeah that was |
|
82:30 | quiet. Is the pit stop city yeah. Mhm Home retrace her steps |
|
85:17 | sure troops. Yeah thank you. worked too many times. So it's |
|
85:32 | she lost the outside. Yeah, war. Yeah. Well, that |
|
85:56 | be, that would be a pleasant dresser. Yeah, there is. |
|
86:13 | your mother, so you could get right for your kids while you're doing |
|
86:20 | . Yeah. Right. Right. . Yeah, wow. You're the |
|
86:59 | . You're supposed to know everything. Yeah, that's the pressure put on |
|
87:04 | all wives and mothers there. Yeah, yeah, yeah, |
|
87:26 | So yeah. And then covid K . Hey, so that's good. |
|
87:51 | . Still its cost something. sure. You felt it where? |
|
88:30 | . Oh. Mhm. Oh Yeah. Mhm Yes. Mhm. |
|
88:43 | said, yeah. Okay. Still me. So Mhm. Yeah, |
|
89:17 | , Yeah. Thank you. Trace path back. Yeah, Yeah, |
|
89:38 | . No, soon as that. . Sure a lot. Okay, |
|
89:51 | , we'll help you keep looking on brakes. All right. We need |
|
89:55 | finish up the, the rest of story here with respect to a couple |
|
90:01 | of pinnacle reefs that evolve in the and then again in the tertiary. |
|
90:08 | we're gonna start first with the east example here. And this is an |
|
90:18 | play too because nobody nobody knew pinnacle existed in the Jurassic until they stumbled |
|
90:23 | this by accident. Again, back the 1990s. Uh, This is |
|
90:28 | east texas basin that we just talked for Haynesville or cotton valley, lime |
|
90:33 | Gilmer limestone deposition remember the two the one we talked about over here |
|
90:39 | the pro grading sand body system. then the other side over here is |
|
90:43 | salt dominated side. And a fair release an area pinnacle deposition has been |
|
90:52 | in this position here from seismic and . And the way this was discovered |
|
91:00 | by just again pushing expiration down into and deeper water. Right, So |
|
91:08 | like Marathon and and Amoco had established further up dip related to the Zoo |
|
91:16 | complexes. And they started shooting Dutton data further down into the basin and |
|
91:22 | discovered this fairway of pinnacle reef So, the first thing I want |
|
91:26 | to appreciate on these older diagrams is is not a shell fetch. All |
|
91:31 | . This is a classical example of mistaking that roll over effect that we |
|
91:36 | about before as a shelf edge or margin, you'll see the seismic in |
|
91:41 | minute. All right, we'll see seismic right now. All right, |
|
91:43 | this is this is down the I mean, this is the update |
|
91:47 | of the ramp here and you're coming down the ramp and you're starting to |
|
91:50 | over. This is the fairway where see pinnacle reef development and just like |
|
91:55 | talked about for the mounds of the in. If you're more up dip |
|
92:00 | less subsidence, they don't get as if you go further down dip, |
|
92:04 | get higher. Okay, so position that profile controls the thickness is controlled |
|
92:11 | the amount of subsidence. Alright, this is all discovered by serendipity off |
|
92:21 | two D. And then three Seismic. And you can see the |
|
92:25 | here. Uh You see the coral fabric. These are deeper water |
|
92:30 | All right. These are branching More delicate branching corals. They don't |
|
92:34 | in high energy settings yet people see debris sheets here and they think that |
|
92:39 | reef built up to sea level. , that's that's absurd. Alright because |
|
92:45 | know, you don't have to be sea level to generate these kinds of |
|
92:48 | stones. 20 ft swells in the roll through the deeper part of the |
|
92:54 | . They will agitate The sand in ft of water. All right, |
|
92:58 | imagine a hurricane coming through this It's going to break this stuff up |
|
93:03 | in deeper water and generate some of screen stone. So, there's no |
|
93:07 | that this ever built up to sea . What's driving this interpretation again is |
|
93:11 | fact that these are a genetic corals dissolved out. So this is the |
|
93:15 | mindset that if I got Secretary I must have built up the sea |
|
93:19 | and got rained on right in order get the fresh water die. Jack |
|
93:24 | that they think operated here. But but and then there are these there's |
|
93:31 | or calculus sponge. Is there any fabric that you see like this? |
|
93:35 | call this microbial? There's in my over use of that term, but |
|
93:40 | that's what they do. All So yeah. Yeah. Mhm. |
|
93:51 | . Not that I know of I know where we're all the earthquake |
|
93:58 | They've been on the Haiti side. still. Yeah, Yeah, that's |
|
94:08 | of the caribbean plate. And that's mean there's some reefs on that side |
|
94:15 | the of the island because that's facing open ocean. And that's also catching |
|
94:21 | word effect. But uh I've not anybody really document that we're the shaking |
|
94:29 | breaks it up. I think if is going to break it up, |
|
94:31 | going to be a tsunami that comes it. And and they haven't had |
|
94:35 | lot of tsunamis that recently uh in history that I know of. So |
|
94:41 | , this is what some of the looks like. And you can see |
|
94:45 | corals, the corals are filled with . Right? And you know, |
|
94:48 | suggests that these things are not in shallow water. But then, you |
|
94:53 | , people see this kind of you're where the fragments of coral get |
|
94:56 | out the mindset. As I said , is everybody thinks that's exposure to |
|
95:01 | water. Well, I've showed you other ways to do this now. |
|
95:04 | , just by shallow burial, you convert and dissolve that Oregon night or |
|
95:09 | could do this in depth. It's interesting that they're also describing uh |
|
95:15 | stage saddle Dolomites and some of these ups. I've heard that there is |
|
95:20 | lead zinc mineralization and I've seen it you can see this valley right here |
|
95:27 | zinc sulfide. So, and some the process created by dissolution of the |
|
95:32 | fabric. And usually that's the kind thing that has generated during later burial |
|
95:38 | genesis. So, these are not well studied buildups because they're all over |
|
95:45 | . So they're very difficult to drill they're very difficult to court. Nobody |
|
95:48 | to corn. Right? So there's little rock data, the ground truth |
|
95:52 | face these relationships. So, until play becomes viable again, which is |
|
95:59 | going to be until the press the gets up higher. Again, that |
|
96:03 | going to figure all of this All right. But again, sort |
|
96:08 | interested in the Jurassic. Nobody thought play existed until they stumbled on it |
|
96:11 | in the 90s. All right. then, you know, related to |
|
96:16 | is what we see in the Jurassic over. Um the you can get |
|
96:23 | isolated reefs down the ramp again that low relief and not pinnacles if you |
|
96:31 | paleo topography created. And I showed this diagram shows you three ways to |
|
96:37 | this. I showed you this this the other today. When we're talking |
|
96:40 | the interplay between evaporates and carbonate The punch of structures can create topography |
|
96:48 | isolate either restore druids. But you do this also with basement structures offshore |
|
96:53 | reactivated basement fault structures and create some . And there are a couple of |
|
96:59 | , probably the best study to second . There's nothing big about eco |
|
97:03 | But uh, you can see the are not that I think. |
|
97:08 | look at the reserves are not that and uh yeah. Um, but |
|
97:13 | this part of the play concept Of creating reef fabric down the |
|
97:18 | Right? So you can do that you have some structural or other paleo |
|
97:23 | created. All right. And then last example of being the tertiary, |
|
97:30 | , the Jurassic finical reefs don't reappear until you get into the, into |
|
97:36 | lower tertiary, into the mostly the . And you can see there They're |
|
97:43 | little sub basins of carbonate production in Asia and three of them have major |
|
97:50 | from these tertiary baseball pinnacle reefs. my scene age through up to 1500 |
|
97:56 | the next summer. one. wonder some coalesce in the bigger scale |
|
98:00 | . They produce room. Karabell frame and debris. And some of that |
|
98:04 | includes the Mc. Right, that favorable micro ferocity development. So, |
|
98:08 | a digest chalk fabric. So mostly porosity development. The source rocks are |
|
98:15 | based on shells are based on their equivalent based on lime stones. Good |
|
98:19 | , graphic trapping potential, but there's a structural component here because a lot |
|
98:24 | people think that these reefs are kicked by some sort of structural effect on |
|
98:29 | sea floor. All right. So famous case studies are a room |
|
98:34 | This was mobil oil's cash cow And when it started to literally lose |
|
98:42 | back in the When did they merge in the 90s? All right. |
|
98:48 | about the time they emerged with Right. Because they were running out |
|
98:51 | money. And But look at the anywhere from 11 to TC 11 to |
|
98:58 | TCF of gas in place. And also a ton of condensate that's been |
|
99:04 | from that field as well. And Custom Guitar is an oil field in |
|
99:10 | of these sub basins called Sala Iwate initial production rates for 32,000 barrels a |
|
99:16 | . All right. So, this , I mean, this is the |
|
99:19 | of all worlds. Right? You're , you're out into the basin, |
|
99:22 | close to the source rock, arguably primary migration for the oil reservoirs and |
|
99:28 | you get good strata graphic trapping All right, But again, the |
|
99:32 | here. And this gets back to point here. This is an example |
|
99:35 | you're coming off some of these tertiary are ramping This is the four slopes |
|
99:40 | of ramping down into a deeper bass these bases be much deeper in Southeast |
|
99:46 | than some of the stuff we're talking up on the Creighton's. But this |
|
99:50 | basically the fairway where you get the Reese developed. Right? And the |
|
99:56 | is thick. It's got good seismic . It's a big structure is probably |
|
100:03 | one pinnacle reef. It's probably a of coalesced pinnacle reefs. Okay, |
|
100:07 | the size of what you see You see us up to 1200 ft |
|
100:12 | , average process 16%. And then are the reserves. Almost 800 million |
|
100:17 | of condensate produced, I believe. right. So this is the |
|
100:23 | this was a big cash cow for oil and the bulk of the most |
|
100:28 | the ferocity is actually micro ferocity, ? When you look at the |
|
100:32 | all the white here. The matrix the critic and it's just riddled with |
|
100:37 | micro ferocity and that prostate produces because a gas reservoir. Right. Permeability |
|
100:42 | not such a big issue. So right. So, and then one |
|
100:48 | example here I showed you the seismic from Libya for that field called Intissar |
|
101:01 | here's a, the location of Intisar in certain basing. I just wanted |
|
101:06 | appreciate the setting of that and you see it's a paleo scene which is |
|
101:11 | oldest in the tertiary, another one these thick based on clinical reefs. |
|
101:17 | high porosity. Pretty good permeability. is a field that, that Feel |
|
101:24 | had about 1000 ft of pay and About 1.8 billion barrels of oil in |
|
101:30 | . All right. Again, what's striking is the high recovery efficiency |
|
101:35 | Those numbers really stand out. I , I find this ironic. A |
|
101:40 | . A lot of companies don't want play carbonates because they're scared about the |
|
101:43 | genesis and trying to predict ferocity. then they also say they're scared because |
|
101:49 | don't think they're going to recover much out of these things. But you |
|
101:53 | make a case that these things are much more efficient and yielding hydrocarbon, |
|
101:58 | a lot of the classic counterparts. yeah, you know how it |
|
102:03 | The manager makes up his mind, ? Don't like something. They're not |
|
102:08 | to pursue it. So, especially the engineers. All right. |
|
102:16 | here's the summary again for the basement down the ramp mountain carbonates usually possess |
|
102:23 | aerial extent the great vertical thickness, they can coalesce into bigger scale |
|
102:29 | but the ages also also determines the . And this is where you have |
|
102:34 | pay attention if you're if you're playing upper paleozoic from Mississippi and screw |
|
102:39 | you're not going to encounter big pinnacle . All right. They're all going |
|
102:42 | be low relief red shapes, buildups. Okay. But in a |
|
102:49 | pinnacle reef, the vertical faces donation more pronounced in the lateral donation. |
|
102:54 | point about reservoir quality. Most traps you'd expect would be good strata. |
|
102:58 | traps, seals are not usually an there. Co evolved deep water |
|
103:04 | shales or sometimes evaporates like you soft the michigan basin and then potential source |
|
103:11 | are not an issue either because you're there close to the potential factory. |
|
103:16 | I think we've gone through just about one of these examples here. So |
|
103:25 | , mm. Mhm. For You need to understand how they were |
|
103:37 | I may let me ask you to an example or something. Okay. |
|
103:46 | maybe you should pick an example and least understand it a little bit better |
|
103:51 | . No, I don't expect you understand every every analog in detail. |
|
103:56 | just that's that's too much for giving we're doing more important to understand the |
|
104:01 | concept and what's controlling occurrence. What the attributes? So pay attention to |
|
104:06 | of those guidelines. The summary Okay. Yeah. All right. |
|
104:12 | , any questions about the my so conventional place? Right, again, |
|
104:18 | define this as being situation of the that most of these companies have chased |
|
104:24 | plays historically because of their setting or of their seismic expression or because of |
|
104:30 | . Okay, so I've got 22 here of the unconventional carbonate play |
|
104:38 | Well, three and the first one be the four sub carbonates. So |
|
104:42 | go through that. And then we'll another little short break here. Ah |
|
104:47 | is a list. Again of my called unconventional play types. And I |
|
104:52 | you, you know, some of are other play types. Just modified |
|
104:56 | car star fracturing. But there is distinct play type here related to the |
|
105:01 | of the shallow water carbonates into deeper . That's what we call force of |
|
105:06 | deposits. And then we'll talk about basin all chalks, the classical deep |
|
105:10 | pelagic chalks that you get in the and tertiary. And I'll take you |
|
105:15 | a couple examples of that. we'll probably get through some of that |
|
105:19 | afternoon and then next friday. Maybe get into the subject. Maybe we'll |
|
105:25 | into the fall control die genesis and little bit more detailed today, but |
|
105:28 | just see if we don't, we'll it over to the next week. |
|
105:32 | right to next friday. So probably most famous example of these four sub |
|
105:39 | deposits is the poza rica trend in . All right. This is this |
|
105:45 | the pool that is linked to the lane platform that we talked about earlier |
|
105:51 | a leeward platform margin reef complex. right. And remember the requirements for |
|
105:57 | carbonate material from the platform into the , uh, in carbonates. Unlike |
|
106:04 | , most of the shedding is along strike of the platform. This is |
|
106:07 | we call line source shedding and then sheds this material? Yes, prevailing |
|
106:16 | . Right. So if it's if weaker trade winds, they can only |
|
106:20 | mud and silt sized material off the . If it's a stronger trade when |
|
106:25 | I showed you for keiko's, it the fine grain stuff off but also |
|
106:29 | carbonate sand off. And when you mud and sand off, what are |
|
106:33 | going to do out on the you're going to accumulate sand, |
|
106:37 | You're going to build up a thicker file with each successive events, |
|
106:41 | Because it keeps tripping out the Right? And putting sand on top |
|
106:45 | sand. And then what's the timing that we talked about? Hi stand |
|
106:51 | , Right. That's the norm. low stan as you would get preferentially |
|
106:55 | a plastic system. So, poza is sits now, all of this |
|
107:02 | beautiful. Perfect sense. If you about the trade winds story, |
|
107:06 | where's poza rica developed is developed off western margin of golden lane field, |
|
107:12 | ? That's the leeward side with respect the strong easterly trade winds. |
|
107:17 | And I, we've already established that good reef development over here for the |
|
107:22 | we talked about. And once those get broken up in a grain |
|
107:26 | certainly the big storm event is going pull some of that grain stone off |
|
107:30 | the adjacent basin. But what's going do it on a more frequent |
|
107:35 | It's going to be the strong trade , they're going to be pushing carbonate |
|
107:38 | off just like I showed you happens on keiko's platform, Right? Whenever |
|
107:43 | winds blow they blow that sand to edge and some of it gets pushed |
|
107:47 | the edge. All right. So rica this wedge. this on lapping |
|
107:54 | , right, Is the red block here, right? It's called the |
|
107:58 | limestone. That's sort of a the from El Obra and Tamaulipas, which |
|
108:06 | the basin filled carbonate out here. uh, you can find some old |
|
108:12 | and say that's not that's not a not a force of carbonate sand that |
|
108:18 | are insists you low stand reefs. right. So, you remember |
|
108:23 | everybody agrees. I think that there's on top of this platform. So |
|
108:28 | is the this is the plastic Right? When you change sea level |
|
108:32 | classics, you just magically shift one to another, right? Because everybody |
|
108:41 | , you know, clay and they don't care about the environment |
|
108:45 | Right? They're just going to be by base level changes. But when |
|
108:48 | have major drops in sea level, doesn't mean you go from reef up |
|
108:52 | to reef right down there. Because what are you going down to |
|
108:55 | down to muddy, soupy bottom? you think that's a suitable environment for |
|
108:59 | a reef? No. Soon. mean, you can't just magically shift |
|
109:04 | faces belts around like people try to with the classics model. All |
|
109:09 | And so the proof is in the . Alright? And I've looked at |
|
109:14 | core when I was at Exxon I a chance to look at a bunch |
|
109:17 | course from, from poza rica And is all debris add mixed with pelagic |
|
109:24 | . This is not an institute low reef. Right? That's just total |
|
109:28 | unfortunately. But but a lot of is driven by people trying to |
|
109:33 | trying to relate the reef, the of the reef by low stand to |
|
109:38 | for the car stand. That's just people do, right? Without looking |
|
109:43 | the rock data. So yes, , this is the on lapping which |
|
109:50 | , remember everything is tilted up to northwest, so there's beautiful strata graphic |
|
109:55 | out of the ferocity into the Tamaulipas on the way our Nueva. |
|
110:03 | well Nueva is legal for an Okay, so either the Tamaulipas or |
|
110:08 | unit here could be the source but also the upkeep sealing faces for |
|
110:13 | porosity. Now look at the scale here, that's 200 m. So |
|
110:18 | 200 400 close to Close to 500 thick wedge up against the platform. |
|
110:26 | then over a distance of 246, seven miles. Yeah, feathers out |
|
110:32 | nothing. Right. That's an impressive of material. All right. And |
|
110:38 | key that is being deposited in deeper is the fact that all throughout this |
|
110:44 | , you find little pieces and lenses pelagic carbonate material that tells you you're |
|
110:51 | this material into deeper water, There's no evidence of instantly reef. |
|
110:56 | ? If there was a low stand , what should you find? What |
|
110:59 | I show you an outcrop a reef and then flanking beds. Right? |
|
111:03 | don't see that And you just see . It's all debris with the |
|
111:07 | uh, cabinets, pelagic carbonate All right Now, the publisher reserves |
|
111:13 | 2.72 billion barrels of oil in I showed you some of the seismic |
|
111:18 | the bureau looked at, both for rica and for Golden lane. And |
|
111:24 | think they've increased the reserves now to billion barrels of oil in place. |
|
111:30 | is an old field has been producing 1930 and so it's not producing a |
|
111:35 | of oil anyway, so I don't how much more of that that matters |
|
111:40 | Pemex wants to go back in and to do some enhanced recovery or something |
|
111:44 | that. But frankly, I don't where Pemex stands in the recovery aspect |
|
111:50 | that, of that field. But is a summary and you can see |
|
111:54 | old the summary is. Right. is 50 years after the field was |
|
111:59 | . Uh, it's described as a . I'd debris flow reservoir. It's |
|
112:05 | incredibly porous. Right? Average only 8%. It's a mixture of |
|
112:09 | , primary porosity the seals. I the trap, I've already mentioned, |
|
112:13 | . It's a combination trapped because of structural tilting strata. Graphic pinch out |
|
112:18 | those based on line mud stones. let me just show you what the |
|
112:24 | looks like. Right? This is of the core that I looked |
|
112:27 | All right. The brown color is Mick. Right? The brown color |
|
112:30 | oil stain. And these are this rudest debris. All the white colored |
|
112:37 | . They're pieces of rudest. So it's a rudest Greenstone. Or you |
|
112:43 | use the term float stone too. down. No problem with that. |
|
112:49 | then in thin section, this is you see a mixture of port |
|
112:53 | So the colored ferocity differentiates different kinds porosity. So the what would the |
|
113:01 | b Right, Well, first of , what are these, what is |
|
113:06 | fabric? Right here, anybody remember term God chicken? No. What |
|
113:19 | to to regulate it brains on the floor when they sit there. What |
|
113:23 | to the outer part 1st? yeah, yeah. But what's that |
|
113:32 | called? Specifically Mcx right, Nick. Right envelope. Okay. |
|
113:41 | then you see what happens to the part of the reaganite gets dissolved out |
|
113:44 | re crystallized. Okay, so they're brains. And so what is the |
|
113:50 | ferocity in between the grains enter I mean it's inter granular but that's |
|
114:06 | part of the choke out and price . Right, Okay. Okay. |
|
114:11 | the blue. No, this is . This is morally right. This |
|
114:20 | created by dissolution member intra particle is . Right now. This is this |
|
114:26 | the green is interpreted the interim Primary. What's left over the poorest |
|
114:32 | fragment. But this is the solution . So that's secondary mold acre parcel |
|
114:36 | for us. All right. And that's that's the producing reservoir fabric. |
|
114:42 | . Not incredibly high porosity. Not high permeability, but but it still |
|
114:47 | . Okay. All right. So back to this old diagram that I |
|
114:53 | earlier for the for the golden lane . Poza rica sits back on this |
|
114:59 | here. This makes sense, doesn't ? That's the leeward side with respective |
|
115:02 | trade winds. But look at this diagram published back in the 79 right |
|
115:07 | cook was the chief geologist for shells team in Houston. And he basically |
|
115:16 | this as a symmetrical atoll reef Right now. He put the term |
|
115:21 | right here too. I took it with Photoshop and I put my little |
|
115:25 | mark there because I don't think you're to get the same kind of |
|
115:29 | I've already showed you a couple examples this windward facing open ocean sides of |
|
115:34 | . Again, don't shed material into basin. They haven't thrown back up |
|
115:39 | make the reef flat. And that's I said, I think Pemex has |
|
115:43 | the play opportunity in this position right . All right. So again, |
|
115:56 | throwing it back toward the lagoon toward blue. Right? That's that's what |
|
116:01 | normally do on a high energy reef faces the open ocean that also catches |
|
116:06 | effect of the strong trade winds. basically our keiko's platform margin reefs in |
|
116:10 | north. Okay, that's what we . And so I would not expect |
|
116:17 | lot of shutting this way. I expect most of the shedding here. |
|
116:20 | . The shedding is not just by trade winds of course, that any |
|
116:24 | storm that breaks up the reef is to pump stuff this way or it |
|
116:28 | throw some stuff back here into the to depending on howard, how it |
|
116:32 | the reef. But after that debris generated on the sea floor. The |
|
116:37 | winds do to things they converted to as we talked about, but they |
|
116:42 | also push that carbonate sand of the and over. Right. And that's |
|
116:46 | I showed you for keiko's. Remember told you my colleague Harold Wanless standing |
|
116:51 | there next to the margin 140 mile hour wind. And and seeing just |
|
116:56 | underwater and seeing the he was cascading the edge. I mean, that's |
|
117:00 | the trade winds do when they Okay, so I can let |
|
117:07 | you know, I've been involved with carbonates for most of my career on |
|
117:12 | off and in south texas. The Edwards trend here are the Sligo |
|
117:17 | for most of my career. I've the old timers. Of course I'm |
|
117:20 | old timer now, but I've heard old timers complain about they about the |
|
117:27 | . Right. Why do the mexicans golden lane and poza rica. Why |
|
117:31 | we have it? We have the age rock up here. We should |
|
117:34 | a golden lane. We should have poser Rekha. Well, what's wrong |
|
117:39 | this area? Right here? That's wrong orientation, isn't it? Doesn't |
|
117:48 | the winds come east to west. . So that's a win word facing |
|
117:53 | . Right? That's not the right for shedding. See what I'm |
|
117:59 | Yes. You need an isolated platform you need to be on this side |
|
118:05 | this side. Right. And have margin reefs shedding material to the |
|
118:10 | All right. So this is not right setting. Right? This is |
|
118:16 | . When you got an offshore paleo . All right. Now, you |
|
118:19 | , I put this prospect here, can't pronounce this. I never struggle |
|
118:25 | this term every time. But you the name of it. All |
|
118:28 | And this is a this is uh sounds good to me. Yeah. |
|
118:38 | . Uh Oh, jesus, probably is back in This is 20, |
|
118:43 | is 2009 just after the price of crashed. All right. I got |
|
118:48 | phone call from from, from 22 here in Houston, one of whom |
|
118:53 | knew through the our local geological The other guy didn't know. And |
|
118:58 | guy didn't know called me and he , you're carbonate guy. Right. |
|
119:03 | said, yeah, I said, want you to come in and take |
|
119:06 | look at our prospect. I okay, where is it? It's |
|
119:09 | uh 50 miles southeast of Houston in County. We found poza rica in |
|
119:15 | . That's what he said. I rolled my eyes. I said, |
|
119:18 | , sure. I didn't tell him . I said, yeah, I'll |
|
119:21 | in and look at it. So went down their offices and looked at |
|
119:24 | seismic and they did find a offshore high. They did find climate forming |
|
119:30 | coming off the leeward northwestern side. think they have a viable prospect. |
|
119:36 | here's the problem 20,000 ft of this dry gas. Okay. And |
|
119:43 | did they find this? Right after , it's been a year earlier, |
|
119:47 | would have sold this for a ton money. Alright. The price of |
|
119:51 | crashed and they've never been able to it. It's like a, It's |
|
120:01 | million dollars test. Yeah. I , and I actually actually went with |
|
120:09 | , I went with them for a to help try to sell the |
|
120:13 | you know, to give them the geology part of it. And, |
|
120:17 | bring in the poza rica analog. I mean, we talked to shell |
|
120:20 | companies like that. I think nobody to risk it, not with that |
|
120:25 | of gas and well the depth and the fact that it's just all dry |
|
120:39 | . So maybe maybe summer. but they had some uphold potential in |
|
120:45 | of the younger classic units. So wasn't just the carbonate part of the |
|
120:51 | . They did, they did have of full potential in the, the |
|
120:54 | is the Wilcox stuff. And so, so I feel, I |
|
120:59 | I've always felt sorry for him and guy passed away and uh, and |
|
121:04 | just not heard what's happened to that , but, but if I was |
|
121:08 | to look for or you were going look for uh poza rica analog and |
|
121:14 | the periphery of the ancestral gulf of . You don't wanna be looking on |
|
121:18 | side. I'll be looking here, ? And there is academic seismic that |
|
121:22 | these beautiful line lapping wedges during the and Jurassic. There's potential over |
|
121:28 | The problem is it's all closed to , right? Because florida has decided |
|
121:33 | rightly so that their tourism is more than risking an oil spill. |
|
121:40 | They came this close to getting wiped by the BP oil spill. I |
|
121:46 | , so I think they realize that's more important. That's, that's state |
|
121:54 | . This is all state waters. a little, there's an area here |
|
121:57 | federal water right here that has been for expiration. Okay. There's an |
|
122:03 | called V. A scandal where there some, there's been drilling along the |
|
122:07 | and also for some of these platform carbonates up on the, up on |
|
122:11 | platform, I skipped over those but there are ruins or reef complexes |
|
122:16 | on the platform that our gas productive work for his son, did |
|
122:26 | Mhm. I didn't know they Okay, well, next time you |
|
122:32 | to him, ask how his dad's don't, I haven't been able to |
|
122:35 | his dad for a while status. same. Uh huh. It's not |
|
122:43 | . Well, that explains it. didn't know that. So, they |
|
122:47 | passed away. Both guys. maybe they passed the prospect Donna |
|
122:53 | Who does he work for? So is the president? Yeah. |
|
123:06 | Consider discovery. I think I've met . I think he sat through one |
|
123:23 | my austin chalk seminars. I just made the connection that he was related |
|
123:27 | Cameron. And you like, mm . He came across that way. |
|
123:34 | intense. And uh yeah. that clarifies a lot of stuff for |
|
123:42 | . Thank you. And then wherever other place you want to look over |
|
123:46 | ? Off the yucatan, Right? if you, if you know there's |
|
123:49 | lot of production here in the right, in this part of the |
|
123:53 | . And the problem is Pemex does describe their reservoirs in any detail. |
|
123:58 | get one paragraph descriptors. So they about sedimentary Brescia and stuff like |
|
124:03 | Oh, that could be that could debris sheets, right? Being soft |
|
124:07 | that labour margin. But what else it be? Where's the chick celeb |
|
124:13 | crater right there. So all of stuff could be related to the impact |
|
124:18 | in the ejecta from the impact So, but y'all y'all see what |
|
124:24 | be looking for. Right, if in a strong easterly trade wind |
|
124:28 | Okay, so now I want to this up by taking you to the |
|
124:32 | and show you that you can shed into the basin even when you're not |
|
124:38 | a strong easterly trade wind built. . The paleo Geography Geography, the |
|
124:45 | geographic maps that I'm going to show suggest that the Permian sat right around |
|
124:50 | equator during this time period. All . So this is lower Permian. |
|
124:54 | , wolf camp is one of the , Excuse me. That has associated |
|
125:00 | of debris reservoirs. All right. , you know, you sort of |
|
125:06 | the lay of the land right to basin platform in this position right |
|
125:10 | Delaware basin, midland basin, eastern on this side of the of the |
|
125:15 | . Right? So, here is same, basically another representation what I |
|
125:19 | showed you Central Basin platform. Delaware and midland basin. So, I |
|
125:25 | back and just try to try to up the the location of some of |
|
125:30 | producing fields. I was trying to if there was a preference to one |
|
125:34 | or the other. Right leeward or hurt. And I don't see any |
|
125:39 | here. Most of the production occurs in the middle of the basin anywhere |
|
125:43 | this stuff has been shut out in deeper water. But when you do |
|
125:48 | , when you do the paleo I may have skipped over of one |
|
125:53 | those maps in your slide said paleo suggests that basically the paleo equator ran |
|
126:00 | right through here. Okay, So in that belt between 5° north and |
|
126:06 | south where the trade winds should not right. There should be no hurricane |
|
126:11 | based on what we see in the today. So what are you left |
|
126:16 | for shedding to trigger setting? The thing you're left with is again, |
|
126:26 | like tectonic activity. Right, tsunamis. All right. You create |
|
126:35 | , you create stability issues along the . Right? You you read you |
|
126:41 | some sort of movement of the It comes down and shoots out. |
|
126:46 | right. It's probably going to come feed your channels and things like that |
|
126:51 | then it's going to run out into basin and then do what run out |
|
126:55 | gas. Right. And what happens these successive event when it runs out |
|
126:59 | gas? What do you start You start piling it up. All |
|
127:03 | , you create this mounted character at end of the line. And this |
|
127:07 | seismic expression. Okay. And the is that companies see this on seismic |
|
127:12 | they think, oh, these are . These are buildups, Alright. |
|
127:17 | , this is the end of the . Sorry, this is the end |
|
127:23 | the line for the shedding and the comes off of both sides of the |
|
127:27 | and basin. So it's not dependent when we're versus leeward. But you |
|
127:31 | see from the seismic data here the out seismic data you can see the |
|
127:35 | feed your channels feed out and then accumulate this stuff out and and deeper |
|
127:40 | . Right. And so there are couple of well established little case studies |
|
127:44 | the literature that show this relationship. this is one from the midland basin |
|
127:50 | appel ranch field. Here's the seismic . And again cos mistook this to |
|
127:57 | a little buildups out in the middle the basin. Of course this made |
|
128:00 | no sense. Right? Because you're in the world of non cal curious |
|
128:04 | shale. That's how deep you So I mean why would you get |
|
128:10 | you carbonate production out there. It's just every everybody was taking these |
|
128:14 | closed contours to be indicative have been you build ups. Right. Everybody |
|
128:19 | what I'm saying. These are not ups. This is stuff that shoots |
|
128:23 | the feeder channels and then starts grading . All right. Mhm. And |
|
128:29 | worked a project like this for a here in Houston. And he actually |
|
128:34 | brought me in the office and he me the seismic data. Of course |
|
128:37 | said we've got these build ups out the middle of middle and basin |
|
128:42 | Yeah we think they're buildups well unique Yeah, we got tons of course |
|
128:47 | want you to describe the core and it up. Okay, we'll answer |
|
128:49 | question. So, there's data from field. Here's some of the |
|
128:56 | I can't tell You can't tell you this comes from exactly. I can't |
|
129:00 | you the field name or anything. but this is some of the core |
|
129:03 | I described. Alright. And I at not just in core, but |
|
129:06 | looked at it within sections to verify and And where the stuff is coming |
|
129:13 | . Right. That's a sedimentary All right. You see this black |
|
129:18 | right here. That's not calculate shell caught up in that transport. All |
|
129:23 | . And some of these branches are graded like you see here, |
|
129:29 | coarser stuff at the bottom and then run out of gas, finer grain |
|
129:32 | at the top. And then sometimes get these impressive grain stone units. |
|
129:38 | they're 10, 12 ft thick. not one event probably amalgamated Greenstone, |
|
129:47 | inter bedded with the black non cal shales. So, that's the evidence |
|
129:52 | you're setting down into deeper water. right. And when you look at |
|
129:56 | grain stones, you look at the of of sedimentary Bradshaw, you can |
|
130:03 | some of the stuff is coming from on the platform. These are the |
|
130:07 | clad green algae. We talked briefly the first day. These are these |
|
130:12 | light dependent they live in relatively shallow . Okay. And then of course |
|
130:17 | have politic related stuff that you know that comes from. Right? And |
|
130:22 | you see this stuff right here with Quran droids and tube affinities and dry |
|
130:29 | . That is coming from one of downslope bounce okay on the flank of |
|
130:33 | middle and basin. When you come , you get those buildups and then |
|
130:38 | get they shed material. All And this stuff goes deeper. |
|
130:45 | And then you can see the reservoir here. A lot of dissolution |
|
130:48 | Some of this is burial. The . Some of this is early dissolution |
|
130:53 | that marine barrel die genesis story that talked about because there's no way to |
|
131:00 | fresh water out here in the middle the basin. So, the red |
|
131:03 | grains are dissolving out during shallow They're generating the pre compaction calcite |
|
131:09 | That's what allows you to preserve porosity depth. Okay. And the evidence |
|
131:16 | some barrel dissolution. Again, not intuitively obvious in a normal thin |
|
131:22 | view, but when you show the paper view, you can see the |
|
131:26 | item in the grand a green suit and you can see all the secondary |
|
131:31 | . A lot of it developed by . Democratic fabric. Right. And |
|
131:34 | of that's preserved along the style lights a stylized So there's some over print |
|
131:40 | barrel this solution here as well. right, Murray Any questions or comments |
|
131:54 | the four slope stuff. So always . That's why I've been stressing pay |
|
132:01 | orientation. Right? at a big on a local scale. Right big |
|
132:07 | . So you understand where you sit those climatic belts and whether you had |
|
132:13 | wind influences or not. And how those trade winds were. And then |
|
132:17 | paying attention to orientation with respect to winds and then orientation of your bottom |
|
132:25 | with respect to the winds. Any questions comments. Well let's take |
|
132:37 | take a break till about 3:15. need to change files anyway. All |
|
132:41 | . So let me pause this. . Yeah. Yeah. Yes. |
|
133:48 | . Mhm. Mhm. Yeah. you. So how long did you |
|
134:44 | for those guys? J. Started off we're getting there sometimes you |
|
134:59 | stuff strategy. Wait street experience close . Mhm. South. Mhm. |
|
135:16 | started out of control. Yeah. right. Yes. He switched the |
|
135:27 | here. Fruit question more. We tried foresight. Well that's |
|
135:44 | Something. All right. Mm. . I think you're buckeyes were |
|
138:32 | Yeah. 35 14. 35 Yes. With about eight minutes left |
|
138:43 | play. Yes. I can check squirt If they lost. 35 28 |
|
139:08 | . Thanks for goodness. Okay. too many teams come into how state |
|
139:17 | later. There are the extent and you went to catholic school too. |
|
139:50 | . So let's get yes. Smart . So yeah that's hard to get |
|
140:15 | because it's not that big a Yes price. The secret sauce. |
|
140:40 | . Like yeah. Sorry. You ever see that? Okay, |
|
140:52 | a really good Before you had to those grades up. Think it's probably |
|
140:59 | same thing. Maybe physically tested. . Yeah. I mean there's a |
|
141:11 | of talking about this before. About a lot of people. I |
|
141:16 | a lot of stuff. Take standardized for to prove anything. Mhm. |
|
141:31 | . Yes. Right. Uh Number. But this. Right. |
|
141:53 | . Mhm. Next thing on the is to talk about the second unconventional |
|
142:03 | play type. And so I call basal de positional talks and this is |
|
142:12 | cartoon or the word slide shows you it fits in. All right. |
|
142:19 | what are basic col de positional They are by definition very fine grain |
|
142:24 | stones. Excuse me, comprised mostly fragments of plastic microfossils and the nana |
|
142:34 | . Remember the globo's foraminifera? The Civic Foraminifera, some of the calcite |
|
142:39 | we talked about that are related to pelagic setting. And then on a |
|
142:43 | scale, the mud matrix is made of these tiny pieces of calcium carbonate |
|
142:49 | to the Kokkalis. That was part the structure in which the golden brown |
|
142:54 | lived. All right. And so a deposition of chalk is porous or |
|
142:59 | . Obviously depends on its die Jack , but it has a different digest |
|
143:03 | than most shallow marine limestone is because uniquely essentially a pure cal Civic |
|
143:10 | Right. All lome calcite material. so historically these depositions chalks produce from |
|
143:19 | primary ferocity. Alright, so remember green types, right? The globo's |
|
143:30 | or titanic foraminifera. They live in upper part of the water column, |
|
143:35 | not right at the surface there 20 m down to about 400 m |
|
143:39 | water depth, that's where they live then they die and they settled down |
|
143:44 | however deep that water is, if too terribly deep, then eventually that |
|
143:49 | dissolves out. But in a shallow tonic basins, this stuff will |
|
143:54 | Right? And then the matrix that see here in thin section is comprised |
|
143:59 | of the coca spheres or the coca . And the scale of ferocity that |
|
144:04 | see in this ECM micrografx here is scale of producing porosity for a typical |
|
144:09 | reservoir. It's a micro ferocity reservoir . Right? And because of |
|
144:15 | it has low matrix permeability, ease because of that, everybody thinks that |
|
144:19 | have to be fractured in order to productive. Alright, so let's talk |
|
144:26 | little bit about this play type. let's come at it from the standpoint |
|
144:30 | again, what do we start with the sea floor? We know from |
|
144:34 | ocean drilling program because they core from set of water interface down to their |
|
144:39 | . We know that these chalk uses the sea floor start off with |
|
144:44 | ferocity, right? All micro And we know with intensity to |
|
144:49 | you will buy physical compaction? You d water And reduce that ferocity to |
|
144:55 | or 55 ferocity units after that There no way to produce to reduce that |
|
145:03 | to lower values other than by di involving pressure solution and calcite segmentation. |
|
145:12 | . At least so far, nobody's able to demonstrate any substantial barrel |
|
145:18 | All right. That's my last point . Everybody does either thinks it's not |
|
145:24 | to happen or nobody's found it yet approved it that it happens. All |
|
145:29 | . I think it happens. And share some ideas with you with the |
|
145:33 | chalk. But um so pressure solution the driver, right style light. |
|
145:40 | usually not the style. It's because the critic. It's a wispy microsatellites |
|
145:44 | dissolves the carbonate material and then that support filling calcite cements. So why |
|
145:50 | these chalk reservoirs exist? They exist you're able to inhibit ferocity loss long |
|
145:55 | to attract the hydrocarbons. Okay, how would you do that? How |
|
146:03 | you do that if everything is trying destroy porosity, burials? Trying to |
|
146:10 | ferocity by pressure solution Like you see . Right, remember we talked about |
|
146:15 | whispery microsd highlights. There seems of where carbonate material dissolves. All |
|
146:21 | They're not early frequent. They're not physical physical sedimentary structures? They are |
|
146:28 | genetic they generate these poor filling calcite ? What does it take to inhibit |
|
146:41 | ? What if you what if you up a scenario where you're poor pressure |
|
146:44 | higher than the overburden stress over pressuring geo pressuring, Right? That's that's |
|
146:53 | are the two ways to inhibit this solution. And if you can attract |
|
146:57 | hydrocarbons and remove most of the then you basically shut down your die |
|
147:01 | . Alright, So this is how preserve high porosity and some of these |
|
147:06 | reservoirs as you'll see for the famous Sea. All right. So, |
|
147:10 | pressure solutions expressed in core by the microsd highlights in thin section. These |
|
147:16 | the subtle dark themes that you see . You really don't appreciate thin |
|
147:21 | How prevalent this is. But if play games with the thin section and |
|
147:25 | what I did was I took a section and I just accepted with a |
|
147:29 | organic acid. Look at the number seams that run through this. I |
|
147:33 | , it's just incredible how many pressure seems are are present. All |
|
147:40 | That's all this. That's all dissolving material. Every one of those is |
|
147:46 | pressure solution seen. All right. a wispy micro style it This is |
|
147:50 | deposition. All fabric. This is die genetic. Alright. And that's |
|
147:54 | insoluble material is standing up. That's concentrated by carbonate dissolution. So what's |
|
148:00 | going to dissolve? Clay's pyrite organic , uh cord sprains and things like |
|
148:06 | are not going to dissolve easily due pressure solution. All right. Of |
|
148:12 | . Again, the question is where that stuff go? Well, it |
|
148:15 | back into the rock as poor filling to plug the primary porosity and the |
|
148:22 | . More importantly, it goes into critic matrix and it fills that micro |
|
148:27 | between the coca colas. That's how destroy ferocity. That's how you reduce |
|
148:32 | even more. Okay, so you've to preserve the porosity. So the |
|
148:36 | is, how do you do You can't do that by exposure to |
|
148:40 | water because low back calcite doesn't dissolve fresh water. Right? And we |
|
148:46 | this because you've all seen pictures of famous white cliffs of Dover in |
|
148:52 | right? Those are talks Those talks 45 million years. They they've been |
|
148:57 | for about that period of time to water. They still have that |
|
149:02 | ferocity, right? That's just after compaction. And that's that's it because |
|
149:09 | don't dissolve in fresh water. So you want to preserve ferocity, don't |
|
149:13 | , very deeply, of course that do anything for making a reservoir. |
|
149:18 | these are the theoretically these are the to preserve ferocity either overpressure G |
|
149:24 | The system where you're poor pressure is than the overburden stress. That's just |
|
149:28 | pressure solution. Or theoretically generate the the oil relatively early and displaced some |
|
149:38 | that water that shuts down the theoretically shuts down the dye genesis machine. |
|
149:44 | that's an intriguing concept. When you about the eagle furred or the or |
|
149:48 | basal loss and chalk which people also to be a source rock. |
|
149:52 | If you're starting to crack off these , they can start migrating up and |
|
149:57 | some of that poor fluid. That be a way to shut down some |
|
150:01 | the dye genesis and preserved ferocity. . And then the barrel dissolution here |
|
150:07 | two question marks here. So nobody has really jumped on this |
|
150:13 | And part of the problem is that rock date is tied up by all |
|
150:18 | companies that are drilling in the areas I think there is barrel dissolution. |
|
150:23 | just can't get my hands on any data yet. But but actually I |
|
150:28 | looked at rock data for clients. just can't talk about this kind of |
|
150:32 | in any detail. But but I there definitely is barrel this solution occurring |
|
150:36 | the chalk and I think it's tied again to some of these deep seated |
|
150:40 | systems. All right, so let what I want to do here is |
|
150:46 | briefly contrast the famous deep water north chalks. These are the famous pure |
|
150:52 | deposits and then show you how the chalk in texas is so much different |
|
150:57 | of the regional fizz. A graphic . All right, so the famous |
|
151:04 | of chalk production is down here in southern part of the Norwegian sector of |
|
151:10 | the North Sea right here. and office is the most famous, |
|
151:14 | This is the one discovered in 1969 by Philips. Now Conoco phillips and |
|
151:21 | interesting story uh, back then, knew chalks could be reservoirs in the |
|
151:28 | . Their target was not chalk Their target was a sand, plastic |
|
151:34 | sheets sitting on a shale dive That's what they had imaged off |
|
151:37 | Seismic. They thought these were classic on a shale diaper and they drill |
|
151:43 | and they found that what they thought sand was poorest chalk sitting on top |
|
151:48 | the shell diaper. And once once they discovered that Within a matter |
|
151:54 | a few years, I think the , I'm going to show you value |
|
151:57 | discovered in 1975. So, certainly less than 10 years, all of |
|
152:01 | pools were discovered in this part of North Sea. All right. So |
|
152:08 | unique about the North Sea is it's highly structured basin. It's been highly |
|
152:13 | . Going back to the permian, got a lot of active tectonics, |
|
152:17 | basement faults, forced and grabbing Remember where the where they chalked producing |
|
152:24 | live. They live up here in upper part of the water column. |
|
152:28 | die and they settle down some of EU's settles down on top of the |
|
152:33 | blocks. Some of the EU's settles in the Robins and then with tectonic |
|
152:38 | . What happens to the chalk. on the blocks rapidly re deposit into |
|
152:43 | province, right? Rapid re There's one way to create over |
|
152:49 | right? You bury that chalk and graven you trapped that poor fluid you |
|
152:56 | Hi hi hi. Overpressure conditions, ? That's how you shut down your |
|
153:02 | genesis machine. So all the famous reservoirs in the North Sea, the |
|
153:09 | ones, the big giant old feels Ekofisk Valhol that we're going to talk |
|
153:13 | in a minute. All of these because of that relationship there you have |
|
153:18 | rapid re deposition of chalk us into Robins. You trap that poor |
|
153:23 | you create the high pore pressure and shut down your diet genesis machine. |
|
153:28 | right. And you can see this you can see this in the |
|
153:31 | The difference between the two. The situ chalk fabric looks like this. |
|
153:36 | is what some people call this laminated . Uh, I use I prefer |
|
153:42 | use the term pseudo laminated. it looks laminated. But when you |
|
153:46 | at this in detail. This is pressured dissolution, Right? These are |
|
153:50 | whiskey micro skylights. And you can there's by a probation here because you |
|
153:55 | see the color modeling here, see color changes within between these so called |
|
154:01 | . That's borrowing. All right. you don't get borrowing and lamination is |
|
154:05 | , right? We talked about that . It's one or the other, |
|
154:08 | not the two together, right? can go from one to the |
|
154:12 | but not in the same environment. can't have the two together. All |
|
154:16 | . Once you get bio debates and going to destroy those nominations. |
|
154:20 | So this is why I use the studio laminated for that fabric. You |
|
154:24 | need to remember that. And then lac tennis, you can see the |
|
154:28 | of class of chalk fabric here. related again to that re deposition |
|
154:33 | So, it's this stuff can be out in the in the in the |
|
154:36 | . Okay, You can see So, uh, Ekofisk is the |
|
154:41 | famous, right? It sits up Discovered by Phillips in 69. You |
|
154:45 | see the published reserves now are 5.4 tank barrel billion barrels of oil in |
|
154:53 | and published opened recovery efficiency is The average Ferocity is 32%. And |
|
155:02 | there's that dreaded K word K right? The Permeability one million |
|
155:08 | Right? When people see matrix ease of one military, See the |
|
155:13 | Word comes out, the geological effort out, sorry. And that is |
|
155:18 | got to be fractured, right? got to be fractured in order to |
|
155:23 | for the production from that kind of permeability. We'll see. Uh |
|
155:35 | I don't know if you know much eco office, right? Uh They |
|
155:39 | happily Forever. Right? Until about , 10, 15 years ago was |
|
155:45 | ? And what happened to the Yeah, I started thinking right. |
|
155:50 | that's not good news in the North where they get the big winter storms |
|
155:53 | uh, they spent about a billion jacking it back up. All right |
|
155:58 | get it up above sea level. what's interesting about about Ekofisk is that |
|
156:08 | gone to to secondary recovery, they've to water flooding and having been having |
|
156:15 | on shocks myself, Austin shock. just found that so incredibly interesting. |
|
156:20 | also mind boggling that you could water a micro forest reservoir like that. |
|
156:25 | apparently they've been very successful in doing . And you know, you see |
|
156:29 | published ultimate recovery efficiency at 22 the Is that it's closer to 35%. |
|
156:38 | . Because of that bump up related the water flooding. So yeah, |
|
156:51 | . Oh, I don't know. don't just don't know the engineering |
|
156:54 | But yeah, you know there they're in down dip, down dip projectors |
|
157:01 | trying to force the oil, the up to displace oil. And |
|
157:07 | uh, now I say that because I work for Exxon back in, |
|
157:15 | in this is 84 I guess I got sent over to, |
|
157:20 | to stavanger which is over here in . That's the big oil town on |
|
157:25 | that side of Norway and uh, put valuable filled up for sale and |
|
157:33 | management was interested in looking at buying field. Okay. So I got |
|
157:38 | up with a guy out of the office. My job was to look |
|
157:42 | the rocks and see what things look . And his job was to put |
|
157:47 | to the structure. All right, the publisher reserves as you see in |
|
157:51 | minute, we're about a billion barrels oil in place. And what was |
|
157:55 | big unknown back then? The big was the ultimate recovery efficiency. |
|
158:00 | Nobody, these guys weren't talking, knew and Amoco wasn't going to tell |
|
158:05 | what they thought the Ultimate recovery efficiency . So we were guessing maybe 10% |
|
158:12 | recovery and that's it again. Back . Nobody thought you could water flood |
|
158:16 | chalk reservoirs. So, so I a chance. I spent a couple |
|
158:20 | weeks and mr banker and I looked all the core from battlefield. It's |
|
158:25 | one of these big structural strata. traps, a big big shell diaper |
|
158:29 | the chalk on top again and it uh it is over pressured, it's |
|
158:37 | strongly over pressured and it's moderately deeply . C 2400 m. Okay. |
|
158:43 | the reservoir is actually broken out into four units and essentially what the tour |
|
158:49 | the hot formation units are, are cleaner chalk deposits separated either by shale |
|
158:58 | are delicious chalks or by charity uh treaty talks with the low permeability. |
|
159:05 | . And the big boomer is the formation, right? And the tor |
|
159:09 | is upper cretaceous into the lower So it cuts across those eight, |
|
159:14 | eight age boundary. Alright, so at the numbers here And I looked |
|
159:19 | core from the tour formation. You see up over 50% para si Some |
|
159:24 | the samples had 55% porosity. That's of ferocity after de watering. |
|
159:30 | Nothing's happened to it after it got . And then lo matrix firms, |
|
159:35 | , what high hydrocarbon saturation did these were producing anywhere from 202,000 12,000 barrels |
|
159:42 | oil a day? All right. when you see these kinds of |
|
159:46 | everybody says, oh, it has be fractured. Right, okay, |
|
159:52 | , I, I when I was the corps warehouse, I picked up |
|
159:55 | piece of core from the Tour formation up, I tried to pick up |
|
159:59 | piece of core about this big All , As soon as I picked it |
|
160:03 | , it fell apart. Okay, was the sample that had 50, |
|
160:11 | . You tell me how that's There's no way that's fractured, |
|
160:16 | In fact, Amoco was producing the with the oil. If you read |
|
160:22 | literature, they describe the stuff coming of the well bore, is having |
|
160:27 | constituent, the the consistency of So like a brown toothpaste coming out |
|
160:34 | the well bore because they got chalk in with the oil. In |
|
160:39 | when we were meeting with the Amoco , I hope this is an engineer |
|
160:43 | asked this question. Not a because the geologist should know better. |
|
160:48 | somebody asked, hey, you guys any ideas how we can keep |
|
160:52 | keep the chalk out of the well and just let the oil through. |
|
160:55 | the guy said, do you think we lined the well bore with chicken |
|
160:59 | , that would help? How big the holes in chicken wire, you |
|
161:03 | , in a chicken cage? How is the coca with? That's why |
|
161:10 | said, I hope that wasn't a . I don't remember who asked that |
|
161:13 | . I think it's an engineer. I give him a break. But |
|
161:16 | uh no, this is a right? They were producing the sub |
|
161:22 | unconsolidated chalk with the oil right These other reservoirs that have 30, |
|
161:30 | The 35 36% porosity. These look hard lime stones, right? But |
|
161:35 | still suck in the water there, micro forest, but they look like |
|
161:39 | more like your tabletop, right? terms of consistency. But the core |
|
161:44 | which yields most of the reserves. don't know how you fracture that |
|
161:50 | Alright? You just can't fracture that . All right, But that's the |
|
161:54 | mindset, that low matrix perm equates being has to be a fractured |
|
161:59 | Alright. Yeah. Exxon walked away the deal because they didn't feel comfortable |
|
162:04 | the recovery factor? uh my colleague actually thought the reserves were greater than |
|
162:10 | billion barrels of oil, so that good. In fact, he was |
|
162:15 | , because look at the published reserves up being 2.6 Stock, 10 billion |
|
162:20 | of oil, But the Exxon management didn't feel comfortable with the primary recovery |
|
162:28 | . So, but I got to at some big chalk. All |
|
162:32 | so that's the story for the deep , deeper see or deeper marine basin |
|
162:38 | chalks Right. What? Yes. , it was all by serendipity. |
|
163:00 | Echo Echo offices drilled off a different concept. They thought they were plastic |
|
163:08 | on top of the shell doctor, thought they were shale with sand on |
|
163:12 | and then the shale movement to create trap and that's what they thought they |
|
163:16 | drilling, they had that gas chimneys off of the sand outside me. |
|
163:22 | they thought they were hiding carbon But no, they didn't they didn't |
|
163:26 | anything about chalk. I mean people studied the outcrops, right? But |
|
163:30 | never established production in the North Sea these chalk reservoirs. Sure, it's |
|
163:38 | correct. Once the play concept was as usually happens, right then they |
|
163:44 | that very quickly. I mean, knew we knew chalks produced from I |
|
163:50 | Austin Chalk goes back to the right, in terms of production and |
|
163:56 | , so people knew the chocolate yell , Just nobody knew that the North |
|
164:00 | had any chalk reservoirs. Okay, right, So then let me just |
|
164:10 | this with what we see here in . All right, and I teach |
|
164:15 | daylong seminar on this. So I'm condensing this down to to a few |
|
164:20 | here. Just to give you a for the the general setting. Um |
|
164:25 | know, you sort of have the of the land now for for |
|
164:29 | right? You know where the land uplift is, it's right up |
|
164:32 | north of, north of san Antonio sort of to the northwest of |
|
164:39 | And the history of this trend is initial the first field, the first |
|
164:45 | field was discovered was Pearsall field down , south of san Antonio. And |
|
164:49 | was discovered back in the mid All right. And then this has |
|
164:53 | a play driven by economics, When the price of oil goes |
|
164:58 | the drilling returns, and so what they been doing? They've been pushing |
|
165:02 | trend up this way. They pushed up here to southeast of Austin. |
|
165:07 | big field Giddings occurs in this position . This is the big active field |
|
165:11 | today. And then they pushed it east texas Brooklyn field and then they |
|
165:17 | it into central Louisiana and they're a of legacy fields here. and since |
|
165:23 | there's been a renewed interest in Louisiana because it's been driven by Yogi who |
|
165:30 | a big player in south texas has a lot of success. So companies |
|
165:35 | if uh e O. G. interested in this area, they must |
|
165:39 | what they're doing, right? And everybody jumped in behind him and started |
|
165:42 | up all the acreage and there was lot of activity until the price crashed |
|
165:48 | Covid. Right? So, and companies are starting to to relook this |
|
165:53 | because the price of oil obviously come up. So that's sort of the |
|
165:57 | of the trend. All right. you know, there are two parts |
|
166:01 | this trend. There's an outcrop belt that goes from Arkansas through southern |
|
166:06 | A lot of the outcrops in Dallas austin chalk, Waco, austin san |
|
166:12 | vivaldi del rio. And even out the big bend area out here in |
|
166:17 | texas, right? That's the outcrop . And then there's a subsurface trend |
|
166:22 | that basically parallels this until you get east texas and then it cuts to |
|
166:27 | like this. All right. And this should continue into Mexico and I |
|
166:33 | don't know what the, what the have done with the boston chocolate Eagle |
|
166:38 | it. I'm sure they've chased some it in that in that area, |
|
166:40 | this is a prolific hydrocarbon province. no question about it. I |
|
166:45 | look at the been a ton of drilled here over the last umpteen |
|
166:51 | a lot of gas, a lot oil and a lot of water produced |
|
166:56 | ? And the water is actually a issue, right? Trying to, |
|
166:59 | to get, trying to figure out to deal with the water and get |
|
167:01 | of the water and things like But But you can see oil equivalent |
|
167:08 | billion barrels of oil produced up to of 2018. All right. All |
|
167:14 | . So the austin chalk occurs in texas. So, the first question |
|
167:17 | wanna ask yourself is again, are regional paleo geographic setting? So, |
|
167:24 | is one of Blakey's maps, which nice for showing you the land masses |
|
167:28 | the shallow and deep marine parts of trend. Right. And they show |
|
167:32 | cretaceous is a time of major Right? We've had the water deepened |
|
167:40 | . That opened up a fair way extended from the gulf basin all the |
|
167:43 | up through uh central US. So you probably heard of the Niobrara |
|
167:49 | that produces in colorado and maybe part Western Kansas? I don't know. |
|
167:54 | in that area there, that trend occurred all the way extended all the |
|
167:58 | up into Western Canada. All That was a fair way of marine |
|
168:02 | chalk deposition. But what's not factored this is the fact that there's a |
|
168:09 | paleo topographic high that sits in central called the landau uplift. Right? |
|
168:14 | was a positive feature during this All right. And then what's the |
|
168:20 | question? That's hard to answer from map. Where are we relative to |
|
168:24 | paleo equator. This is a thing drives me crazy with Blakey. He |
|
168:28 | puts the latitude aligns on his maps for the equator. And if if |
|
168:34 | not in that area where the equator through, then you have to guess |
|
168:38 | you're at. All right. I prefer maps like this as I |
|
168:41 | you before, because here's south texas the effort. Cretaceous. And so |
|
168:48 | map is interesting because In south this suggests that we're actually north of |
|
168:53 | 30° latitude, right? It suggests in a cooler temperate water climate. |
|
169:01 | I'm going to argue from the geology a minute that no, we were |
|
169:04 | in that cooler water setting. We in the upper reaches of the subtropical |
|
169:10 | . Okay. And that's why I don't just rely on these maps. |
|
169:15 | them guide your initial feel for where at. But then go look for |
|
169:19 | in the rock data that tells you you're in cold water setting or a |
|
169:25 | subtropical setting. All right. And here's the evidence that the austin shock |
|
169:30 | subtropical and temperate. We have lots antagonistic skeletal precursor grains, modest green |
|
169:38 | rudest in south texas. All we have you. It's now the |
|
169:44 | are scattered and they're replaced by but it would have to come from |
|
169:52 | high energy show somewhere or beach or up dip. Well, the update |
|
169:56 | up toward the llano uplift and all that stuff has been chopped up by |
|
170:01 | faulting. Right? So you'd have really go in there and just sample |
|
170:06 | heck out of those sections here to to find maybe some shallow water equivalent |
|
170:11 | the Austin shock. But this stuff have lapped up eventually up onto the |
|
170:15 | uplift. So there had to be shallower equivalent. There's lots of carbonate |
|
170:19 | obviously and there's mud producing calculus algae be present given how shallow some of |
|
170:26 | stuff was. Remember calculus algebra not limited to, You know, 10 |
|
170:30 | 15 ft of water dip. The algae actually lived down to 70 m |
|
170:35 | water depths. Alright, and then sediments lack much of any solicit solicit |
|
170:41 | input. All of this is contradictory temperate water. I don't know, |
|
170:46 | didn't tell you to pay attention to temperate water story because I'm not going |
|
170:50 | test you on this. But remember water, you don't get a rag |
|
170:54 | material, you don't get carbonate you don't get to it. You |
|
170:57 | get any rag genetic material because the is too cold. Okay, so |
|
171:02 | geological data suggests that we're still in the northern reaches at least of the |
|
171:09 | the subtropical belt which puts us into influence of both the easterly trade winds |
|
171:15 | the weaker went wins. But also hurricanes? Right, hurricanes generally moving |
|
171:21 | east to west. Okay, so south texas, what sets up the |
|
171:28 | paleo geography prior to austin chalk Well, the first major influences obviously |
|
171:34 | llano uplift. Right, this is pre Cambrian catholic that's been sticking out |
|
171:39 | the water from the camera and up the upper cretaceous. Alright. And |
|
171:44 | there's structural extensions off of that. mentioned the san Marcus arch that comes |
|
171:49 | of that to the southeast, That creates an area of shallow water |
|
171:53 | you see the chalk thins up onto . So you know that that was |
|
171:57 | water setting. Then you have other extensions off of the san marcos |
|
172:03 | The famous one is the Pearsall arch moves to the is perpendicular to the |
|
172:08 | Marcus arch and trends down to the . Well, it's the nose of |
|
172:14 | Pearsall arch where they found Pearsall Okay, that was that was where |
|
172:19 | made the discovery. Then there are regional fault trends again that I mentioned |
|
172:23 | are roughly parallel to the margin of ancestral gulf of Mexico. Then of |
|
172:29 | you also have other inherited paleo topography to those shallow water carbonate systems in |
|
172:34 | Sligo James Stewart city. Right. then all of what happens at the |
|
172:41 | of Edwards time, everything is drowned by deepwater Georgetown plastic carbonate and then |
|
172:47 | del Rio comes in. It's more a sort of a marginal marine, |
|
172:54 | delicious marine carbonate I guess is the way to describe that with pelagic material |
|
173:00 | so to even shallower water, right . And then eagle for probably represents |
|
173:06 | pulse of rising sea level because eagle is definitely much deeper water than the |
|
173:13 | . And then I view the austin as a continuation out of the eagle |
|
173:17 | basically in south texas, right becomes shallower shower equivalent but influenced by the |
|
173:24 | to uplift. All right, so are the structural elements that you have |
|
173:29 | think about in south texas where all classical Austin chalk was played initially right |
|
173:36 | the Pearsall field down here to the field up here in this position right |
|
173:41 | . So lando uplift san Marcus the paracel large coming off of that |
|
173:47 | . Those fall trends. I talked the parallel. Yeah, this casa |
|
173:51 | parents trough. Of course you have negative topography here to write the maverick |
|
173:57 | . This is obviously a deeper water relative to the chalks that occur up |
|
174:02 | this position here. Right, Just right. So you may or may |
|
174:07 | know this, but I, I the austin chuck for my dissertation when |
|
174:11 | was a grad student at rice. and uh I came, I came |
|
174:17 | rice to get some experience working ancient because I cut my teeth in the |
|
174:21 | and the Bahamas. That's where I my masters. And so I wanted |
|
174:25 | get the other end of the spectrum see what the deepwater equivalents look |
|
174:30 | And uh put together a proposal to a regional study on the deposition all |
|
174:37 | and the dye genesis and cross evolution the Austin chalk. And so you |
|
174:41 | see my database here is a series outcrops focus basically from just north of |
|
174:49 | down into Mexico. And uh you you can see the sampling the green |
|
174:57 | or the outcrops that I sampled. then the red dots are the core |
|
175:02 | and then the green dots down here Mexico. Are these outcrop sections that |
|
175:07 | down in Northern Mexico and went to northern Mexico because my advisor thought that |
|
175:14 | is probably the deepest water equivalent of I would look at in texas. |
|
175:18 | right. And he was right, right. So you can see when |
|
175:22 | first wrote up the dissertation back in Early 80s we didn't talk in terms |
|
175:29 | ramp sand platform models. We talked terms of shelves and basins. |
|
175:34 | So you can see my initial way of characterizing the Austin chalk was this |
|
175:39 | of shallow water here shallow water chalks I called the shelf and then deeper |
|
175:44 | chalk that I called the basin. what I noticed over the years was |
|
175:49 | a lot of people were mistaking this term basin to mean gulf of Mexico |
|
175:55 | depths. Right. No, we're on a drowned carbonate platform. This |
|
175:59 | just that relatively deeper water equivalent. so I have I ran up against |
|
176:05 | much of that that I just decided change the terminology to bring it up |
|
176:09 | in terms of terminology. So, look at this as a hybrid deposition |
|
176:14 | . Right. This is a basically drowned cretaceous carbonate platform shallower up dip |
|
176:20 | of ramping down to where the Sligo edge. Right, Because that's the |
|
176:24 | shelf or platform margin and then dropping into the true deep water basin of |
|
176:30 | ancestral gulf of Mexico. And it's deeper when you go down here to |
|
176:34 | Mexico. Okay, so what why I do this? I mean I |
|
176:39 | this because there's a difference in the of these chalks. Right. If |
|
176:45 | up dip and what I call the ramped, the first thing is striking |
|
176:50 | the sediments or light color. There's lot of macro fauna including primary Iraq |
|
176:55 | grains, which includes calcium sponges and cretaceous, which are a genetic there's |
|
177:02 | rhythmic betting where you get this classical shale, chalk, shale betting. |
|
177:07 | right. That's usually in the really water part of the trend. That's |
|
177:10 | you see in Mexico. And then water trace fossils. Oyster by |
|
177:15 | A lot of scalable by erosion contrast with the basal stuff generally darker |
|
177:22 | limited macro fauna restricted a reaganite poor good rhythmic betting people under trace |
|
177:30 | The only reaganite you see here in outer ramp or deeper basin. This |
|
177:35 | that's been pumped down ramp by Remember the tempest side story that we |
|
177:40 | about before. Okay. And so have had to account for the difference |
|
177:45 | color. Had to account for the fauna. All right. But I |
|
177:50 | also had to account for the presence the plastic microfossils which are present in |
|
177:55 | environments. And so you can see inferred the water depths and shallows tens |
|
178:00 | meters deep enough to give you pelagic , but shall enough to account for |
|
178:05 | light color and the other macro fauna including the Iraq genetic material. And |
|
178:12 | of course progressively deeper as you went to the edge and then over the |
|
178:17 | . All right. But I don't I don't think you're ever deeper than |
|
178:20 | 100 m of water depth because you out to where the Sligo platform margin |
|
178:25 | before he dropped off into deeper Okay, so the outcrop stuff looks |
|
178:30 | this. Right? Were massive lime . Not a lot of good betting |
|
178:35 | . Uh not a lot of shale in with this stuff and lighter |
|
178:42 | Look at the rocks here, light a lot of macro fauna, including |
|
178:46 | regular tick bivalves and and gas calc sponges. All right. But |
|
178:52 | matrix contains the plankton microfossils. you know, your deep enough to |
|
178:58 | to get so called chalk deposition. ? So this is the update part |
|
179:03 | the trend. Right. And there's here. These rocks still have 2025% |
|
179:08 | because they've never been deeply buried. ? There's no pressure solution. These |
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179:14 | have never had more than a few ft of settlement on top of |
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179:17 | which is not deep enough to give pressure solution. All right. And |
|
179:23 | that with the deeper water equivalents down ramp. Alright, darker colored chalk |
|
179:29 | . There's variability and the color, variability and stratification. There's variability. |
|
179:35 | our delicious material where the core breaks , there is variability where some parts |
|
179:39 | more organic rich. But what doesn't here? This is all deep water |
|
179:44 | chalk. Right? And then some it is highly biased abated. And |
|
179:47 | basil chalk is actually laminated and is to be a source rock. This |
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179:52 | that rock that had anywhere from 1 21% T. O. C. |
|
179:57 | . So I think, I think people, not everybody agrees on |
|
180:02 | but most people think the basal Austin is self sourcing. All right. |
|
180:06 | a source rock at the oil migrates to the upper part of the chocolate |
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180:11 | little bit higher up in the chalk that's what they have chased and |
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180:15 | And of course now companies are just drilling both the eagle furred and the |
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180:20 | chalk to frack the source track. , now, here's the other part |
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180:26 | the story that when you go down sometimes in Korea you encounter rock that |
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180:30 | like this lighter color limestone. See punctuated by uh, sometimes a few |
|
180:39 | , sometimes a half a foot or of this fabric. That looks a |
|
180:43 | like what I just showed you for update part. These are little regulated |
|
180:47 | tripods all through here and these are tubular tempest. It's, we talked |
|
180:52 | right, the backfield burrows and then another lighter chalk punctuated by uh, |
|
180:59 | darker colored fabric. This is darker because it's blah kinetic. The source |
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181:04 | the block tonight is that shallower in ramp area. And so what's moving |
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181:08 | stuff down here? It's the big . Right. And so what are |
|
181:11 | doing to the chalk trend? You're, you've got an admixture of |
|
181:15 | tonight and kelso, right. This totally different. And what I described |
|
181:19 | the north Sea, right? Where all pure calcium material. Right? |
|
181:26 | how do you do that? this is where the big storms come |
|
181:30 | . Okay, This is why I it's important to know that the chuck |
|
181:33 | still in that subtropical belt. So, hurricanes. This is what |
|
181:40 | I showed you some of this for right. Remember what the, when |
|
181:45 | hit keiko's platform, it stirred up mud and brought it offshore and then |
|
181:52 | settles out into deeper water. here's an example from Bermuda, the |
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181:56 | of removed off in north Carolina that I got smashed fired Hurricane in |
|
182:04 | It put all the money suspension. the normal title exchange pulls the mud |
|
182:08 | shore right into deeper water and then settles down well, that's what you |
|
182:13 | with the chalk. Right? Go to the map. All right. |
|
182:16 | here's your factory for making a reaganite . Right. Hurricanes are coming generally |
|
182:22 | to west. Right, remember the winds out of the Northeast quadrant. |
|
182:29 | , So they're going to do what going to force a lot of |
|
182:32 | The rag genetic material, especially the size material, to be moved this |
|
182:37 | . All right. But it can moved anyway at once depending on the |
|
182:40 | that the hurricane hits. But generally hurricanes go east to west, the |
|
182:45 | struck winds are like this. okay. They'd be blowing to the |
|
182:49 | . So this is a very unique positional setting. All influenced by the |
|
182:56 | uplift and those structural extensions off. what creates the shallow enough water to |
|
183:02 | me this mixture reaganite calcite system. that's what makes the Austin chuck really |
|
183:07 | . All right. And so you see that you can see the difference |
|
183:11 | process of evolution for the Austin chalk here. The north seat examples, |
|
183:17 | . Echo fist highly overpressure, deeply has very good porosity preservation because of |
|
183:22 | pressuring. But even the normally pressured sea chocks because they're pure cal citic |
|
183:29 | still have higher, higher preserved even though they're basically as deeper deeper |
|
183:35 | the Austin chalk. And then here's Austin chalk, shallower barrel depths. |
|
183:40 | has lost a lot quicker and a barrel depths. Okay. And I |
|
183:46 | that to the fact that this is mixed or reaganite calcite system, |
|
183:51 | digest potential is so much higher. the chalk, Austin chalk that it |
|
183:56 | in the North Sea chalk. And the challenge is trying to figure |
|
184:01 | what parts of the chalk trend, know, you preserve porosity better |
|
184:08 | Yeah, did you create some secondary ? Right, And that's the big |
|
184:13 | and I just don't have time to into this in a lot of |
|
184:16 | but uh but you would know about currents trough. Right, Right. |
|
184:22 | Eagle for production there and there's there's chalk production there and their monster production |
|
184:29 | in the Austin chalk there that stand like a sore thumb. Right, |
|
184:34 | this is what got me re interested the chalk. Was this something different |
|
184:39 | when the normal production rate is production rates should be maybe 500,000 barrels |
|
184:45 | day. And they're getting 5000 barrels day. Okay, out of some |
|
184:50 | that current straw stuff. And so I think there might be a story |
|
184:58 | that the reactivated basement faults are bringing fluids to drive some of the dissolution |
|
185:03 | when you look at the older Edwards cars trough? It is cut by |
|
185:10 | faults. It shows barrel this solution and the older carbonates. Well, |
|
185:15 | not in the younger carbonates? companies have the rock day to prove |
|
185:21 | . They may not have the staff look at it the right way, |
|
185:24 | I know egg has a ton of that that where this could be figured |
|
185:29 | . All right. Yeah. All . So, this is a summary |
|
185:35 | the play types for the Austin You can see sort of the history |
|
185:40 | . I mean, everybody played the looking for normal faults and declines or |
|
185:44 | faults to trap the hydrocarbon. And they also played the structural influences to |
|
185:49 | what to crack the charge. Because is the mindset, right? That |
|
185:53 | chalk has to be fractured. And did they drill? They drill the |
|
185:57 | cleaner chalk because it's more brittle. they want that to be fractured. |
|
186:03 | ? And so the question is, is he? Well, coming |
|
186:05 | let's see, they're coming from Eagle coming from the base of loss and |
|
186:09 | . Lot of people view the Austin is a classical fractured reservoir with a |
|
186:14 | porosity system. Enough matrix porosity to for the volume of hydro apartment produced |
|
186:21 | to increase the permeability. Alright. then more recently, companies started playing |
|
186:26 | basal part of the chalk as a rock just directly going in and fracking |
|
186:33 | . Right, horizontal drilling and fracking . Okay. And that's this part |
|
186:41 | the story. Right here. All . And then I'm sorry, |
|
186:44 | got ahead of myself here before they looked at the upper part of |
|
186:49 | Austin chalk. The cleaner Austin chalk the reservoir. And they looked at |
|
186:53 | basil chalk as a kitchen or source . And then they just chased the |
|
186:57 | up there or higher in this playing for structural strata, graphic |
|
187:02 | All right. And now, I , you know, the strategy is |
|
187:07 | a little bit that there's been a of drilling and gettings field. And |
|
187:12 | think now a lot of companies are to the conclusion that you really don't |
|
187:17 | fractures to get good protection. It's important to chase the areas of a |
|
187:21 | bit higher matrix frosting permeability. Uh 3-5% porosity was pretty good. |
|
187:32 | Matrix porosity for chalk. But now of the numbers and getting spilled or |
|
187:36 | up 5-9, sometimes 12% porosity. something going on there. All |
|
187:43 | And often times it looks like the processes around some of these deep seated |
|
187:48 | systems. All right. So, think some of the companies are thinking |
|
187:56 | don't really need to chase fractures because frack job, right, are gentry |
|
188:00 | job is going to take care of . Let's find the ferocity. And |
|
188:05 | think right now that's sort of the . All right. And then I |
|
188:10 | some of the companies are directly going the base of loss and chalk as |
|
188:14 | source rock. And then I think question is whether there's some parts of |
|
188:18 | trend that are overpressure geo pressure that preserve proceed depth. And of |
|
188:24 | I think there's small controlled dissolution going . But I think that could be |
|
188:30 | documented from areas like currents trough. mean, it's just that that coordinated |
|
188:34 | becomes available that Yeah. All And then this is what the fractures |
|
188:42 | look like in the chalk right Vertical sub vertical fractures turns out that |
|
188:47 | are healed when you look at them thin section. But everybody calls the |
|
188:52 | chalk a dual porosity system matrix perm proceed to hold the hydrocarbon fractures to |
|
189:01 | it. Okay. And I would historically the production history supports that. |
|
189:07 | get the gusher rates like we talked right in the old days, the |
|
189:12 | . Well, that was a good rate 300 barrels a day. |
|
189:16 | And it would stay like that for or months and then it would drop |
|
189:19 | and produce 100 barrels a day Okay. But as I said, |
|
189:24 | always. There's some examples from Pearsall Where these initial rates jumped up to |
|
189:31 | barrels and they stayed there for 50 . That's not fracture. Assistant |
|
189:37 | All right. So there's there's a to be learned here for the |
|
189:41 | Right. We don't have anywhere close all the answers. Right. And |
|
189:45 | some of that data from Piersall field shows you the again this is in |
|
189:49 | literature, Right? This is not telling you that this happened. This |
|
189:54 | this is published where you can see for 50 years produces initial I. |
|
190:00 | . Rates. All right. All . So, let me just finish |
|
190:04 | this discussion will take a little You're, you know, there's a |
|
190:08 | of interesting questions about the chalk. then the first question that intrigues me |
|
190:12 | what defines a field in the chart , most fields. You see what |
|
190:18 | entrapment, right? Where you see domo structure that entrapped the hydrocarbon. |
|
190:23 | see closure and things like that. don't see that in a lot of |
|
190:27 | chalk fields, right? You see draw a circle around their limits of |
|
190:33 | production. They call that a There's no obvious reason why production was |
|
190:39 | . Right? I worked in Russia time for Norwegian company. Right? |
|
190:46 | Russia opened up back in the early and I hooked up with the company |
|
190:52 | of Oslo and we went to, went to uh went to Siberia for |
|
190:59 | couple of weeks because I wanted to into one of the Russians opened up |
|
191:03 | their fields for development and external investment the Norwegians were interested in doing |
|
191:10 | So we went over there went to their oil town. Well, I |
|
191:16 | remember the name of it now. can I forget this? Uh, |
|
191:21 | have, but it's like midland right? But in the middle of |
|
191:26 | , right? Oil town. And , it wasn't very charming. This |
|
191:33 | right after Russia opened up and you really see what communist Russia was |
|
191:37 | right? I mean it was and food was horrible and every everything was |
|
191:42 | , but but it was, it interesting. I mean we were looking |
|
191:46 | these Devonian reservoirs, they're called reef . And remember sitting down with the |
|
191:53 | of course we had to use a and everything. And you know, |
|
191:57 | see the field outlines and I asked one of the Russian geologist, what's |
|
192:02 | rationale for calling that a field? eliminates the field? Where is the |
|
192:08 | ? He looked at me uh, is no closure, I said |
|
192:13 | So how do you define your Well, we start right here and |
|
192:17 | drill this way until we run out production and then we come back to |
|
192:21 | center point, we drill this way then we drill this way and then |
|
192:25 | drill this way, then we draw circle around it and this is what |
|
192:30 | austin chuck reminds me of. All , Hi. Yeah. And then |
|
192:35 | the role of fractures? I certainly fractures don't hurt right there always |
|
192:39 | improve your permeability, but you always to have a dual porosity system and |
|
192:45 | don't think you do. I think with the big gen, three frack |
|
192:50 | , you want to find the sweeter firm areas. Okay, that's more |
|
192:55 | . And then what's the role of seated structures and, and not only |
|
193:01 | , but, and trapping of hydrocarbons potentially later stage diet genesis with respect |
|
193:07 | the Yeah, development, secondary porosity depth. All right. These are |
|
193:14 | questions I think needs to be to answered. And I've been at this |
|
193:21 | a while. So I think I've the lesson I've learned in this business |
|
193:26 | that were driven by paradigms. bye. Every basin is driven by |
|
193:31 | paradigm, Right? This is, is what produces, this is, |
|
193:34 | is what controls production and people stop questions and then new concepts developed. |
|
193:42 | ? And it's really important. I every I said here about every 30 |
|
193:46 | , but probably every 20 or 25 . It's important to come back in |
|
193:49 | re evaluate, right. Ask some questions. A lot of people stop |
|
193:53 | questions. They just do what they're to do based on what, what |
|
193:59 | previous generation said should be there. this is how you do it. |
|
194:04 | , and then you may or may know. But the eagle furred is |
|
194:08 | the same kind of deposit. It's a shale in south texas, but |
|
194:11 | really an organic rich pelagic limestone and , but it's called a shale for |
|
194:17 | investors. Right? Because they want hear that buzzword shale as a research |
|
194:22 | play and but it's a deeper water . I'll chuck. I don't think |
|
194:26 | any question about that. There's not much organic material associated with it. |
|
194:33 | , but you do see some moods there that are fossilized. Like I |
|
194:36 | you you get any austin chalk and the trend and pretty much mimics a |
|
194:43 | trend of the Austin chalk in south . And of course you want to |
|
194:47 | attention to the trend map and the of the eagle furred. If you |
|
194:51 | a lot of your oil or gas coming from, is coming from the |
|
194:56 | food right into the Austin chalk So a couple of pictures here just |
|
195:01 | show you how much different it It's just dominated by pelagic material, |
|
195:05 | forums and, and calcite spheres. , but there's some interesting die genesis |
|
195:11 | to write. Uh, you see this re crystallization of the critic |
|
195:16 | That's not a normal phenomena for a . All right. There's something going |
|
195:20 | to do this. You see this the Austin chalk to write. |
|
195:25 | um, you see people describe grain and core and the eagle furred, |
|
195:32 | is sort of ludicrous when you think it. But they're describing fabric like |
|
195:37 | . This is diabetic fabric that makes look like a clean grain stone. |
|
195:42 | actually still a Pakistan or Pakistan, just been highly altered by re |
|
195:46 | So calcite, that's calcite, that's replaced. That's a recruit fine scale |
|
195:53 | . Re precipitation of the Democratic The coke lists are disarming, |
|
195:59 | That takes acid fluid. You can't that for him. The normal burial |
|
196:04 | or certainly not freshwater. There's not be freshwater there anyway. Right. |
|
196:09 | , yeah, that's right. Mhm. Mhm. What Sure between |
|
196:24 | much select? Yeah. No, not a pure shell. Yeah. |
|
196:37 | . I think I think that's just politics of trying to shell sell a |
|
196:42 | play. Right. So, Okay. And that's just the |
|
196:47 | I'm not gonna not not going to about not going to test you on |
|
196:51 | eagle for All right. So. . All right, you bet. |
|
197:08 | . All right. So, we've one more unconventional play to talk about |
|
197:13 | we're gonna we're gonna split this We'll take a little break here and |
|
197:17 | we'll finish up the day here will be finished before five. And uh |
|
197:22 | going to talk about the these fall , digest plays. I really want |
|
197:27 | . I really want to get into to show you how these reactivated basement |
|
197:33 | dr deposition and the digest history of of these carbonates. And we'll do |
|
197:40 | first with a case study from Western Devonian. And then when we come |
|
197:45 | on friday, I'll take you through Ellenberger in West texas. Everybody calls |
|
197:49 | Ellenberger a near surface Karst related I disagree. And I'll show you |
|
197:55 | evidence for that. I'm not saying car every Ellenberger pool is like what |
|
198:00 | going to describe, but at least going to show you an alternative because |
|
198:05 | course people have a big problem. know, they rely heavily on freshwater |
|
198:10 | systems, but they can't show where fabrics are. And the Ellenberger, |
|
198:15 | only thing they could show is Right? So they just take the |
|
198:18 | to be an indication of near surface . So any, any questions about |
|
198:24 | we've covered so far before we stopped pause, the recording. Yeah. |
|
198:29 | right. Well let's take a people start back up in about 10 |
|
198:33 | or so and and we'll call it day. All right. From |
|
198:48 | 30 rounds. Yeah, that's all group. Yes, get it. |
|
198:58 | is to the roads part. Uh . With all this possible, we |
|
199:04 | said that it was the lower right? Not that that's right. |
|
199:13 | one of the key, the key with the orbital sciences also the that |
|
199:21 | not Yeah, clamshells probably similar to he found on his sister gin up |
|
199:27 | like texting little calcification oysters called X . They have to see the ribs |
|
199:34 | them preoccupied. So what you're talking the growth bridges, uh, they're |
|
199:40 | of curved a curve like that one's actually more like this shit. They |
|
199:46 | , they were, I think they're . Yeah, they're not bracket pots |
|
199:51 | die out by the end of the . Mm after that. Anything that |
|
199:57 | like looks like a clam shells So we found the big models. |
|
200:02 | of the world's biggest, Yeah. door Catalina, they were going to |
|
200:07 | . It would take these sands. the extra hats. Actually pick it |
|
200:13 | . It's just that no secure explained weather out. I said, |
|
200:18 | collecting these little loans and actually be orbit. It's very interesting. |
|
200:26 | I mean trinity group includes, I 5 to Mr chair. I think |
|
200:33 | is part of the trinity group. . I don't know if sister city |
|
200:38 | into that. Yeah, you should . I just find all, that's |
|
200:44 | that's starting graffiti use of Peter say , I'll, So I don't know |
|
201:00 | any evaporates with the glen rose that up in the Edwards. It's really |
|
201:05 | to that belt up around products for area. It's what people call a |
|
201:13 | for Frishberg of apparatus or Frishberg on other side of the planet to uplift |
|
201:21 | north west or north. Yeah, . And then if you, if |
|
201:25 | drive up, You drive up the , I think it's like 281. |
|
201:29 | you go up to 81 or some those other roads that go north. |
|
201:33 | of the outcrops, you see these collapse features broke out. Those are |
|
201:39 | to leach evaporates by some people I think that's very hard to |
|
201:44 | That's true. That's what's up Yeah. I mean would have petty |
|
201:52 | , you know, it was there it's missing. Yeah. Unless you |
|
201:56 | maybe you pick up some random gypsum something. The sequence. Yeah. |
|
202:03 | a good point. Really. Done looking. No. Yeah, the |
|
202:09 | off look there. I would actually Chanet rock right before the semester |
|
202:15 | Sorry, there. That's interesting if get down to the southwest over whole |
|
202:23 | of whether. Mhm. What? . Okay. Yeah, there's there's |
|
202:31 | lot, there's several guidebooks published their . You have to help. I've |
|
202:38 | on a couple of field trips in area. Yes. Somewhere out there |
|
202:46 | . So is a section where based limestone actually tweets oil. Right. |
|
202:56 | . Yeah. Yeah. Think it's Edwards basil. Edwards deposit magic dark |
|
203:04 | a laminated, Yeah. Mhm. . Okay. Mhm. Yeah. |
|
204:09 | . Yeah. Mhm. Yeah. . Right. Oh yeah. So |
|
205:16 | a football game today, but it's on campus. Right. They're |
|
205:20 | they're playing rice actually bryce. So they'll be here next weekend. |
|
205:34 | don't have class on saturday. So good. Yeah. Mhm. That's |
|
205:50 | . Mhm. Certain losses. Yeah. Mhm. Yes. |
|
206:16 | Mhm. Credit. Yeah. Oh, okay. The last thing |
|
206:35 | the agenda is to talk about this last style of what I called unconventional |
|
206:43 | play type and this is the this the fall controlled diabetic plays. So |
|
206:49 | are these are one of the other play types modified by deep seated reactivated |
|
206:54 | falls. You're going to see that basement faults not only play a role |
|
206:58 | a trapping the hydrocarbon, but they the dye genesis. Okay. And |
|
207:03 | really the takeaway that I want you get from our discussion here today and |
|
207:08 | friday. All right, So, going to start first with a a |
|
207:14 | study down here in the keg So I mentioned that there are five |
|
207:18 | a mega sequences in Western Canada that oil and gas productive the keg |
|
207:23 | Uh, the baby beaver Hill, group that's judy creek that we'll talk |
|
207:27 | next friday. All right. And the LaDuke reefs. I think I |
|
207:32 | how those things get dull monetized to you the super permeability reservoirs. |
|
207:37 | And then the Nevsky, we mentioned pinnacle reefs in the Nevsky the tabulate |
|
207:41 | . And then we abdomen would be last sequence. And the woman is |
|
207:47 | mostly shallow water. My critic but his fault controlled by genesis there |
|
207:51 | . That sets up these dramatized plays the waterman, right. So, |
|
207:56 | can see the topography in the keg . Right? You've got these isolated |
|
208:02 | sub basins with clinical reefs. We about those pinnacle reefs before and then |
|
208:07 | to it are these little carbonate All right. So, we're gonna |
|
208:13 | talking about a famous area up here Northwest Alberta. Right. And this |
|
208:18 | called the rainbow Zama area and the that you see here is all related |
|
208:24 | these integra tonic basil sags. So, these little sub basins of |
|
208:29 | scale course, That's pretty small scale here. These are pretty big sub |
|
208:34 | . Alright. And they end up in with the evaporates. Eventually the |
|
208:38 | evaporates and that's what the pink That's why they call it a restricted |
|
208:42 | . But initially it's open marine carbonate and then it goes hyper saline. |
|
208:48 | . And then you can see the represents the shallow water carbonate platforms |
|
208:53 | All right. And the trojans you see here coming off of what's |
|
208:59 | the Peace River Arts, The Peace arches like the Atlanta uplift in Western |
|
209:04 | . Right. Another one of these tick bath lists that gets eroded. |
|
209:09 | then the open ocean and green is to the north, as I said |
|
209:13 | . All right, So, I'm to share with you a case study |
|
209:19 | I got involved in as a client and we subsequently published on this. |
|
209:23 | , you have a couple of papers the travel drive that basically show everything |
|
209:28 | I'm showing here. Okay with some to go with it to support |
|
209:33 | but appreciate where we're at. We're this little platform called Comet platform. |
|
209:38 | , So, this is shallow water light blue. And then this is |
|
209:41 | sub basin rainbow sub basin That ends filling in with evaporate deposits. This |
|
209:47 | where they found the classical pinnacle reefs the KGG River back in the |
|
209:52 | Okay. And then companies just stepped their expiration up on a common platform |
|
209:57 | they found little subtle bumps on seismic they thought were related to the pinnacle |
|
210:02 | . So they thought the parents were in deep water, They thought the |
|
210:06 | were up on the platform. That's the play concept For 25 years. |
|
210:11 | right. And I want you to how close we are to Master Wrench |
|
210:17 | system called the Hay River Falzone. Hay River is of the scale of |
|
210:22 | the san Andreas today is in California it's been a active reactivated false system |
|
210:28 | back from the Devonian, up through cretaceous. Alright, so it has |
|
210:33 | effect on not just the devonian, the younger carbonate, mississippian carbonates in |
|
210:38 | area and also the younger classics that mostly Jurassic and cretaceous age. All |
|
210:45 | , so just appreciate, we're not far away. You can see the |
|
210:48 | , there were less than 20 miles from the Master wrench fault system. |
|
210:53 | , remember, I think you all this, but master Ranch false systems |
|
210:58 | conjugal faults, right? They come at different angles. You have a |
|
211:02 | wrench. Then you have faults that off at high angle 70-90°. And then |
|
211:07 | have faults to come off at low 20-30° to the master wrench. So |
|
211:13 | keep that in mind as I developed story. So here's a little cartoon |
|
211:18 | shows the play concept that was Developed in the 60s companies like S. |
|
211:25 | . Out of Calgary and shell. drilling off a two D. |
|
211:29 | They discovered these pinnacle reefs. Some one well wonder. Some take four |
|
211:33 | five wells to develop. They found of these within a few years and |
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211:39 | they stepped up their production expiration up the platforms. And you see, |
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211:44 | discovered on size, make these subtle features And by subtle, I'm talking |
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211:49 | 16 to 28 m of closure. right. So on seismic, they |
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211:54 | like little pancakes barely. And they those, they thought they were |
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211:58 | They thought they were baby pinnacle reefs . All right and true to the |
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212:03 | approach to, to petroleum geology. drilled the devil out of these things |
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212:08 | they court them tons of core In fact, the Canadians were hung |
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212:14 | on whole core analysis. Right. did all this whole core analysis for |
|
212:19 | permeability. But what did they never . They never slapped the cords. |
|
212:24 | ever looked at them. They didn't . They're happily producing 300 - 500 |
|
212:30 | of oil a day. Multiply that six. So 1800 to 3000 |
|
212:35 | 3000 barrels of oil a day for . And these pools And they produce |
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212:41 | that for 25 years. And then happened in the late 80s production dropped |
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212:47 | . Right. So that gets the attention and that's what led to this |
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212:53 | study. All right. So this a two man your study. I |
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212:58 | involved obviously, and then my uh, Ian Mirror, who worked |
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213:02 | esso resources, was the the guy I worked with on this study. |
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213:08 | . And so The goal was two first to get production back up. |
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213:13 | , Because that's that's really what the cared about most. And then |
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213:18 | they had all this unexplored land over . And so before they went searching |
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213:24 | here, they wanted to understand what play concept was. Were these really |
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213:28 | pinnacle reefs? I mean, it no sense right up on a carbonate |
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213:35 | ? Or was there some other play ? So the second part of our |
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213:38 | was to figure out the play So they could use that and start |
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213:43 | another surrounding platforms. Okay, so the starting graffiti for this part of |
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213:51 | . First of all, the you to appreciate the pre Cambrian basement rock |
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213:56 | very shallow and this part of in fact, she a thermally, |
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214:01 | is the hottest part of Alberta. , this is the hottest part of |
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214:07 | because of that shallow Grenet basement And then what do you see out |
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214:11 | the basin? The strategic a fee the basin where you get the pinnacle |
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214:14 | is you've got red beds and evaporates the pre Cambrian and the lower keg |
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214:22 | , which is a broad shallow or platform, not high energy. And |
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214:26 | what nuclear it's off of that are pinnacle reefs these recent group to Anywhere |
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214:32 | 6 to 802,000 ft of vertical They end up being encased in a |
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214:39 | , lower salt, Black Creek, and then the musk ag. |
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214:44 | And then there succeeded by the sulfur , which is another carbonate unit through |
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214:49 | carbonate unit on top of that. obviously sea level came up and created |
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214:53 | accommodation and then a classic unit on of that called the White Mountain. |
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214:58 | what's not shown here is the next succession called the Slave point. I |
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215:03 | those because what I'm going to describe the keg river and up on these |
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215:07 | in terms of die genesis and ferocity . Whenever those faults reactivate up into |
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215:14 | sulfur point or slave point, you exactly the same style of die |
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215:18 | Okay, so I just want you appreciate that. All right, so |
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215:24 | approach was to get our hands on much rock data as we could. |
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215:29 | you can see the data that we . We looked at 145 wells, |
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215:35 | of which were cord and most of were cord through the Keg River, |
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215:39 | is sort of interesting because most companies drill into the top of these formations |
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215:43 | that's it. But to their they did core into deeper successions. |
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215:48 | organized our data into uh 12 east cross sections. We made both structural |
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215:55 | , graphic cross sections. We tied with three north south lines. We |
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216:00 | in the pinnacle reefs as well into study because neither easy nor I had |
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216:04 | worked a strong not operate pinnacle So if we're going to evaluate baby |
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216:10 | reefs on the platform, we needed know what the parents look like. |
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216:13 | we actually started with the offshore satellite reefs and we looked at those first |
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216:19 | make sure we understood those. And we had a basis for comparison to |
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216:23 | we see for these little pools up on the platform. So you see |
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216:28 | dark lines here and the letters Pool and pool? S pool deedee |
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216:34 | B B, Pool BBB. There's called, let me get rid of |
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216:45 | . There's one called bunny. So don't know why they changed the name |
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216:48 | , but they call that one I always found that funny. |
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216:52 | They use lettering systems for most of other ones. But anyway, that's |
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216:56 | database. So we ended up with ft of core and, and then |
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217:01 | of this stuff was highly altered dramatized . Right? In fact, in |
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217:06 | I always joked, you know if just look at a few cores to |
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217:09 | with, we never figured out what going on. And this is the |
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217:13 | to be learned that when you work dramatized sequences that are highly altered by |
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217:17 | genesis, you have to look at lot of core and in order to |
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217:23 | little windows of opportunity where you can some of the better preserved fabric. |
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217:27 | by doing that, we're able to together the deposition all story. But |
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217:31 | had, we had to describe the first and then we get thin |
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217:35 | I come back to Houston. I'd time working up the thin sections using |
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217:39 | white paper technique or the fluorescent technique try to see through the masking |
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217:44 | And this is how we built our graphic faces framework. Okay, so |
|
217:50 | , here's what the reservoir rock looks and you can see why it? |
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217:54 | so never bothered to slab the Right? In fact, they never |
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217:57 | rock like this for whole core analysis the edges are too rough. Engineers |
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218:02 | nice little tight cylinders, right? they can put in a sleeve and |
|
218:06 | for porosity and permeability. But this the prime reservoir rock right here, |
|
218:11 | zebra Dolan, my fabric. We about before that buggy porosity related to |
|
218:17 | dissolution. And sometimes I told my expanded to give you the big buggy |
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218:22 | like you see here and sometimes that the expanded to give you a ferocity |
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218:28 | enough to get solution and collapse. . These are the barrel branches we |
|
218:32 | about because the style lights within those might plastered all different angles to each |
|
218:37 | and the horizon. That has to barrel brecca. All right. But |
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218:43 | very difficult to put this into an context. Right. You can't see |
|
218:47 | of the fabric because of the over of dehumanization and the over print of |
|
218:52 | of that dramatized fabric. But as said, when we looked at enough |
|
218:57 | , not all the cores highly And you can start to see little |
|
219:01 | of opportunities here. Some of the looks like this. Well, this |
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219:04 | the dullest own where you can see robust branching storm atop roids. |
|
219:09 | That's not necessarily part of the That can be a more open marine |
|
219:13 | part of a platform. All And then we see that build up |
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219:17 | the little stick like after poor after likes to live in restricted lagoons or |
|
219:27 | materials. Okay. And then we some of that great up into the |
|
219:31 | laminated or crypt alga laminated fabric. the finesse to fabric, no |
|
219:38 | Right. So it's restricted. This title flat. All right. And |
|
219:42 | basically the story we put together is on the platform. We're not dealing |
|
219:49 | baby finical reefs. We're dealing with stacks cycles. All right. These |
|
219:55 | , 2, 3 m thick It's to go from sometimes deeper open |
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220:01 | , we call granny lagoon, all platform interior carbonates up into the anthill |
|
220:07 | ? More restricted deposits. And then sometimes by title flat and they repeat |
|
220:12 | and over again. All right. it's the stack cycles that got structured |
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220:19 | reactivated basement faults that created the structural Of 16-28 m. That's what created |
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220:25 | seismic expression they took to be All right. Just had nothing to |
|
220:30 | with reefs. In fact, they chasing everything up on the platform |
|
220:34 | And if there is a restriction up the platform, then what has to |
|
220:37 | out here? Some sort of high marginal faces. Right. Either re |
|
220:43 | you. It's right. But you people about who is in Western |
|
220:47 | Oh, no. There's no use Western Canada. No words except right |
|
220:54 | . They actually korda. Well, , that looks just like the Jurassic |
|
220:58 | over. People have just been looking the wrong side of these of these |
|
221:03 | . Right. So, they've just focused on seismic. They don't really |
|
221:09 | the de positional part of the All right. All right. |
|
221:13 | so we resolve that part of the , Right? We're producing from these |
|
221:17 | stacks cycles that are offset by reactivating faults. Now, the question |
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221:22 | what's the timing of the porosity Is this the classical Dolomites story where |
|
221:28 | just replace the limestone and maybe generate toward the end of the decolonization |
|
221:34 | Or is there another part of the that involves this solution of dramatized |
|
221:40 | Alright, so the way we got handle on that was from the detailed |
|
221:44 | using the white paper techniques. So can see These two paired photographs |
|
221:51 | You got the you got proxy And I think you can see even |
|
221:54 | this photograph, partial dissolution of some the crystals of dolomite. All |
|
222:00 | But you can't relate it to deposition fabric in that upper photograph. But |
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222:04 | the lower photograph you can see the of the relic grains, right? |
|
222:08 | are smaller pieces of and fry They've been demonetized and they're structured and |
|
222:14 | dole might over lies the future So that's burial Dolomites. The first |
|
222:18 | we learned was this is all barrel . And then what happened to that |
|
222:24 | fabric? It got dissolved out to degrees. But look at the distribution |
|
222:29 | the ferocity, it's random, it's confined to the centers of grains like |
|
222:33 | showed you remember the normal story is front comes after big grain. And |
|
222:39 | when you get 70, you leach the center here, it's all over |
|
222:43 | place. Plus we see evidence of crystal dissolution. Alright, So that |
|
222:48 | to be accounted for. You need fluids to do this. You need |
|
222:51 | to dramatize and then you need one dissolve that dramatized fabric. Alright, |
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222:57 | this is where we started suspecting the framework came into play, right? |
|
223:02 | provide the right kind of fluid to the door of my dissolution. And |
|
223:07 | of course that ferocity expands right? expands from two moulding ferocity like you |
|
223:12 | here filled with Bitumen to a larger buggy ferocity and then this would expand |
|
223:18 | the zebra fabric or the Brescia fabric I showed you before. Right? |
|
223:24 | a grander scale of dolomite dissolution. . All right. In other |
|
223:30 | this kind of fabric. Your all . So, we've had the discussion |
|
223:33 | these brunches, right? These are scratches, right? It never made |
|
223:39 | sense that you would get cursed in part of the devonian because you have |
|
223:43 | dry climate, you have co evil associated with these devonian carbonates. So |
|
223:50 | would you get a lot of freshwater ? And then we talked about the |
|
223:55 | fabric being controlled by style. Ites by fractures. Right? When the |
|
224:01 | come up like this, they move along the style lights because the style |
|
224:05 | are right there and then they die . They get cut out by buggy |
|
224:09 | . Then you pick up the style on the other side. All |
|
224:14 | And then we noticed in core that we had a lot of zebra fabric |
|
224:17 | where we had british aviation. What we see? Always hanging around these |
|
224:22 | stage and hydrates. Alright. So saw the fractures feeding the zebra filled |
|
224:28 | an hydrate where we saw these stolen , stone bridges with a and hydrate |
|
224:34 | . And we suspected that these calcium fluids were the driver for the |
|
224:39 | This solution. Okay. So, we started plotting, after we integrated |
|
224:44 | initial core description with the with the section work, we finally built our |
|
224:53 | graphic faces framework. Right. And it's really a simple story deposition |
|
224:57 | Right. We've got mostly restricted subtitle dominated by an for bora grading up |
|
225:04 | tidal flat. And it repeats over over again. All right. And |
|
225:08 | at the scale of these cycles. is the 123 m thick cycles that |
|
225:13 | talked about that are characteristic of what of the deposition profile, the inboard |
|
225:20 | . Right? The inner part of platform. You don't find 123 m |
|
225:24 | cycles at the margin. You find any cycles out in the |
|
225:28 | Right. So, this is characteristic platform interior. All right. And |
|
225:34 | , because we suspected, well, wanted we also want to understand what |
|
225:40 | the zebra fabric was their faces controlled zebra fabric. So, you see |
|
225:44 | we describe the core, we plot distribution of the zebra fabric and Z |
|
225:49 | again, we suspected. And hydrate a role here, along with the |
|
225:53 | . So, wherever we can see in core, we plot that and |
|
225:57 | we saw replace of and hydrate or and hydrates cement. We would we |
|
226:04 | map that as well. Okay. this is how we built our |
|
226:08 | Graphic face this framework. Now, did we put this into a context |
|
226:12 | regional correlation? We did it by these small scale cycles into the composite |
|
226:19 | we talked about the other day. these small scale cycles? The lower |
|
226:25 | are thicker with a greater subtitle faces . And then subsequent cycles tent. |
|
226:30 | then and then you turn around to cycles with more subtitle faces. So |
|
226:38 | are the composite cycles. These are 7-12 metre thick cycles made up of |
|
226:42 | 123 m thick cycles. Good gam at the base. God damn expression |
|
226:47 | the top. This is what we correlate all the way across common |
|
226:52 | This is how we set up our strategy graffiti. And then these cycles |
|
226:58 | we had the well control within the would correlate for hundreds of meters or |
|
227:03 | few kilometres. Alright, because those minor cycles. Major cycles always correlate |
|
227:11 | a greater area. Okay, so is how we built the framework. |
|
227:18 | , so there's the top of the river. So these are the composite |
|
227:23 | . K one to K two K K three, Right, 7 - |
|
227:27 | metre thick cycles. And you can the smaller scale cycles go from |
|
227:31 | subtitled the green title flat, repeat and over again. You can look |
|
227:36 | the zebra distribution here. It turns that most of the zebra fabric is |
|
227:41 | not to the title flat, but the subtitle carbonates that were riddled with |
|
227:46 | highlights and style, I suppose were conduits for the fluids moving this |
|
227:51 | All right. And then Where was of the production? I told you |
|
227:56 | , what the companies did back in 60s. Right. They drilled a |
|
228:00 | or they drilled a reef like an bucket. Where do they drill? |
|
228:04 | drilled structural high point and they just into the top assuming the whole thing |
|
228:11 | be filled to spill point. they didn't realize that their cycles and |
|
228:17 | boundaries are permeability barriers to flow. right. They produce for 25 years |
|
228:23 | from this upper cycle. And Ian this out within a few weeks. |
|
228:29 | told his engineer, you need to your wells, deepen your wells and |
|
228:34 | going to find more oil. They their wells, they got production back |
|
228:38 | to where it was before we started study. So we're not two months |
|
228:42 | our year long study and and they've got production rates back up. They've |
|
228:46 | paid for our salary and we haven't finished. Okay. So that was |
|
228:51 | of satisfying that the two of us figure this out. All right. |
|
228:55 | there's play potential down here too. just have to deepen the wells. |
|
228:59 | right. Which is what they ended doing. All right. So here's |
|
229:04 | some of our regional across sections that put together. I mean, we |
|
229:08 | at all the core data we could including any core that cut the mustang |
|
229:14 | point or slave point. And by the combination structural extra graphic cross sections |
|
229:21 | . You could demonstrate that there were periods of reactivated basement vaulting, |
|
229:27 | The first period was lower to middle river structuring. That's what creates this |
|
229:32 | right here. Okay, these faults up the fluids. The fluids get |
|
229:37 | laterally because there's faces controlled dissolution of dolomite. So the porosity extends away |
|
229:44 | the false. And we could demonstrate our core control that proceed the fluid |
|
229:50 | out at least several 1000 ft from well board to create this prostate. |
|
229:55 | think it's further, but we just have the data to show that. |
|
230:00 | , But where's the oil and trapped oil and trapped is not in the |
|
230:04 | areas. It's up against the Is classically entrapped oil. All |
|
230:09 | But the ferocity is all through right on both sides of these |
|
230:14 | Okay. That's that's the that's the the faulting right, bringing up the |
|
230:19 | and then whenever this fault reactivated up the sulfur point, you would get |
|
230:27 | upper mustang structuring wherever you got you would get the same kind of |
|
230:32 | developed in the sulfur point. And if it popped up into the slave |
|
230:36 | , you get the same style of genesis. Alright, so this is |
|
230:40 | fall controlled die genesis. It's entrapping hydrocarbon, but it's also creating the |
|
230:45 | ferocity which is due to dissolution of fabric. Okay. The net effect |
|
230:52 | is the 16 - 28 m of closure. And that's what they picked |
|
230:57 | in that position right there. All . So just just look at this |
|
231:02 | . This is a hand drawn structural map. Remember where our master fault |
|
231:08 | ? It's down here to the southeast look at the structural contours. They're |
|
231:13 | mimicking the conjugal faults that come off a high angle right here and then |
|
231:18 | another little wrench the customer here. you see deflection of the contours and |
|
231:23 | the false go like that. All . So just mentally put this in |
|
231:27 | brain now and let's look at the of the pools and the ferocity. |
|
231:32 | , so what we It's interesting that engineers only used a 3% ferocity cut |
|
231:38 | for their economics. And why did do that? Because they did hold |
|
231:42 | analysis on the tighter Dola stones. they didn't want to touch the highly |
|
231:48 | stuff because of the irregular nature of borough of of the core. |
|
231:53 | So we just use their 3% proxy off. We plotted for each composite |
|
231:59 | . We plotted Greater than five m greater than 3% ferocity. We did |
|
232:04 | for the three composite cycles and look they mimic the distribution of that structural |
|
232:11 | . That's just that's just telling you faults are controlling the ferocity development. |
|
232:16 | . Mhm. And then we also and hydrate being moved up along some |
|
232:20 | these fault planes to create side closure some of these reservoirs. So, |
|
232:25 | actually did the same thing. We we mapped the distribution of these replace |
|
232:29 | an hydrates. We looked at some that caught that cuts through the fall |
|
232:36 | That had 80 or 90 ft of white and hydrate. Okay. And |
|
232:42 | this was important for sealing off the of that reservoir. Alright. But |
|
232:46 | was also part of the story of these calcium rich fluids to drive the |
|
232:51 | dissolution. All right. And then the here's the faulting worked out from |
|
232:56 | two D. And three D. data from the geophysicists. Again, |
|
233:00 | Master wrench followed us down here, you can see the the different sets |
|
233:04 | faults. Right? So, it's tied back to the to the deep |
|
233:08 | reactivated basement faulting. And it's not deep. Right? You're only a |
|
233:12 | 1000 ft from frenetic basement rocks. that's the beauty that you're not that |
|
233:17 | . All right. So here's the sectional view. Again, the pinnacle |
|
233:22 | turns out that they're not just deposition origin. They are also controlled by |
|
233:27 | reactivated basement faulting. That's what creates initial topography to kick these things |
|
233:32 | All right. And then up on platform those low relief traps that we |
|
233:37 | about with 16-28 m of closure. ? They're they're due again to the |
|
233:43 | basement faulting. And what's what's the that we had these hot fluids coming |
|
233:51 | of frenetic basement rock? What's associated all this die genesis the kinds of |
|
233:56 | I've been talking about before. Mega . Let's sing mineralization. Okay, |
|
234:05 | florida was analyzed for geo so mama hydrothermal. Okay. The fluoride was |
|
234:12 | . And then here's the clincher reservoir . You know where helium comes |
|
234:20 | That's a radioactive decay product of frenetic rock. The helium is so mobile |
|
234:26 | to capture any helium in the DST significant. Well, they captured commercial |
|
234:32 | helium in some of their D. . It's a first of all, |
|
234:36 | amazing that anybody would look for helium they did that routinely on all their |
|
234:41 | . Sts. For these wells. right. And so some some you |
|
234:46 | commercial grade helium is this .1% Some these wells had .3% helium. |
|
234:54 | so that's the clincher that you have reactivated basement faults bringing up these hot |
|
235:00 | . They have to be acidic or rich or both in order to account |
|
235:04 | the dolomite dissolution. But also to for the emplacement of the mega courts |
|
235:09 | the most of the lead sank Okay. Yeah. But you could |
|
235:18 | could solve it obviously because of the data. Right? If this is |
|
235:24 | here in the U. S. me companies would not drill like the |
|
235:28 | drill. Right? And then with hold their data anyway. Right. |
|
235:33 | in Canada, as I said, province has a huge core warehouse. |
|
235:39 | the half the data gets archived with government which then allows anybody to come |
|
235:44 | and all you do is pay a to get the course laid out. |
|
235:48 | right. I mean, it's it's that expensive. So that's a |
|
235:54 | That's the beauty of uh of doing kinds of studies in Canada. |
|
236:00 | And that's why I said, I I said early our di genetic understanding |
|
236:04 | the last 20 years has really come of Western Canada because of that core |
|
236:09 | . All right. All right. there's a couple of papers on blackboard |
|
236:14 | summarized this and then there's a paper talks about the Ellenberger that I'll talk |
|
236:20 | next week and contrasted with what I showed you for the keg river in |
|
236:25 | . So that's it for today when come back next friday. Uh |
|
236:31 | I'll send you the answers to the exam uh tomorrow sometime. Okay. |
|
236:37 | then I'll grade your exams. And y'all get y'all got the scan. |
|
236:41 | ? So I'll scan them and send to you and then give you the |
|
236:45 | back next friday. And then next we can talk about the exam from |
|
236:52 | and then we've got only a couple things to talk about. Next |
|
236:55 | Uh We're gonna talk about the here's another fall control, digest play |
|
237:01 | then um I'm gonna make some summary about carbonate plays and and things to |
|
237:08 | of. And then we'll talk about a carbonate reservoir. That will be |
|
237:13 | judy Creek example. I'll take you that in details. You see how |
|
237:17 | built their strata, graphic faces And then I'll got some cross sections |
|
237:23 | maybe give you and we can talk . And then the last thing we'll |
|
237:27 | on friday is we can have a about the final. Okay. Uh |
|
237:32 | . All right, good service. , saturday off. Yeah, me |
|
237:43 | . Yeah. Uh huh. It's to get up on saturday morning and |
|
237:48 | in early |
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