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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 36, No. 4, December 1993. Pages 9-9.

Abstract: Previous HitSealNext Hit Controls on Trap Capacity and Previous HitMigrationNext Hit

By

William T. Shea, Jr. and Susan Haggerty

The capillary properties of sealing rocks can control hydrocarbon column heights and influence the geometry and position of Previous HitmigrationNext Hit Previous HitpathwaysNext Hit. We have used mercury-injection capillary pressure (MICP) data to investigate the sealing properties of both cap rock and Previous HitfaultNext Hit seals, and apply the results to predict trap Previous HitsealNext Hit capacities and model Previous HitmigrationNext Hit processes.

Most mudrock seals, irrespective of depositional environment, have extremely fine pore-throat systems that are capable of trapping large (>1000 ft.) hydrocarbon columns. These Previous HitsealNext Hit capacities are typically greater than trap closure heights, and only limited vertical leakage is expected through matrix pores. Results to date suggest that Previous HitsealNext Hit quality does not degrade significantly until total clay contents fall to <30 wt.%. Flow simulations show that in these silty "waste" zones, long-distance lateral Previous HitmigrationNext Hit can occur at geologically-rapid rates.

The capillary-pressure response of several North Previous HitSealNext Hit Previous HitfaultNext Hit seals is highly variable, due to differences in lithology and deformation conditions. Grain-scale deformation and cementation dramatically increase capillary entry pressures relative to the undeformed reservoir. However, entry pressures are not generally as high as those measured on common top seals. These results show that Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone material can provide an effective hydrocarbon Previous HitsealNext Hit, but may trap only limited Previous HitfaultNext Hit-dependent column heights.

The rock property data can be integrated into a "fill-and-spill" type Previous HitmigrationNext Hit model that assumes: ( 1) impermeable top seals, (2)rapid Previous HitmigrationNext Hit rates, and (3) bottlenecking at faults. In places where vertical Previous HitmigrationNext Hit is critical (e.g., Gulf of Mexico), we propose that the same Previous HitfaultNext Hit can Previous HitsealNext Hit an accumulation and provide an effective Previous HitmigrationTop pathway.

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