Petroleum migration, faults and overpressure. Part II. Case history: The Haltenbanken Petroleum Province, offshore Norway
Autor: | Marcello Cecchi, Richard Olstad, Kristian Backer-Owe, Rainer G. Schaefer, Eirik Vik, Jon Erik Skeie, Dag A. Karlsen, Knut Bjørlykke, Kari Berge |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 237:305-372 |
ISSN: | 2041-4927 0305-8719 |
DOI: | 10.1144/gsl.sp.2004.237.01.18 |
Popis: | Petroleum inclusion and geochemical data from core extracts were applied to deduce a model for oil migration, overpressure development and palaeo-leakage of oil from currently dry structures in the Haltenbanken Vest area. The existence of fluorescent oil type inclusions in quartz in the Smorbukk (Asgard-2) field suggest that oil migrated into this structure 70–50 million years before present (Ma bp). This is also the case for the dry structures 6506/12-4, 6506/11-3 and 6506/11-1, west of the main Smorbukk Fault Zone. Black oil inclusions with medium gas/oil ratio (GOR) occur in these fields together with condensate-type petroleum inclusions. This suggests that the dry structures transformed from containing oil to condensate before leakage. Petroleum extracted from inclusions in these structures and in nearby fields have identical marine type II kerogen signatures. Source rocks at the Spekk Formation level in the current drainage area of Smorbukk and these dry structures, were immature 70–50 Ma bp and the Smorbukk Sor (Asgard-3) field did not fill at this early time. Thus, oil must initially have entered into Smorbukk from areas to the W-SW, through the currently pressure sealing Smorbukk Fault Zone which today marks the westward limit of the Smorbukk field. Diagenesis in this fault zone caused the much later overpressure development and petroleum was lost from the 6506/12-4, 6506/11-3 and 6506/11-1 structures as overpressure built up regionally. Petroleum loss from these structures with their often thick seals must have occurred via self-propagating open-fracture-induced mechanisms. Lack of petroleum in the Cretaceous strata above these structures suggests that leakage occurred to even shallower strata. This could imply that the Cretaceous strata in Halten Vest were overpressured at the time of leakage. In contrast, the oil in the Cretaceous Lysing and Lange Formation (above the Jurassic reservoirs in Smorbukk and Smorbukk Sor) most likely originated (based on geochemistry and GORs) from the Jurassic reservoirs below and not from Cretaceous strata. This migration event would have been facilitated if it occurred before these sands became overpressured as they are today. Modelling suggests that the Spekk Formation became mature in the Smorbukk Sor region |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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