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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract

 
 
Chapter from: M 61: Basin Compartments and Seals 
Edited by 
Peter J. Ortoleva
Authors:
H. P. Heasler, Ronald C. Surdam, and J. H. George

Methodology and Concepts

Published 1994 as part of Memoir 61
Copyright © 1994 The American Association of Petroleum Geologists 
All Rights Reserved

 

Chapter 16

*
Pressure Compartments in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming and Montana,
as Determined from Drill-Stem Test Data

H. P. Heasler
Ronald C. Surdam
University of Wyoming
Laramie, Wyoming, U.S.A.
J. H. George
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Daytona, Florida, U.S.A.



*

ABSTRACT


Drill-stem test (DST) pressures from oil and gas wells were analyzed in an attempt to determine the existence of pressure compartments in the Powder River basin. DST data for the entire basin were first sorted by geologic unit for the Mesaverde Formation (984 data values), Sussex Formation (1041 data values), Frontier Formation (821 data values), Muddy Formation (3888 data values), Dakota Formation (1157 data values), and Minnelusa Formation (4470 data values). Initial and final shut-in pressures (ISIP and FSIP) were graphed versus each other and versus depth and elevation to display functional relationships. Potentiometric surfaces were then constructed using the maximum of the ISIP and FSIP.

The pressure-elevation plots and potentiometric surfaces clearly show the existence of anomalously pressured zones in the Frontier, Muddy, and Dakota formations. The anomalously pressured zones as determined from the potentiometric surfaces are discrete areas on the scale of individual oil fields. The boundaries of the anomalously pressured areas as shown on the potentiometric surfaces are characterized by steep hydraulic head gradients of up to 12,000 ft (3600 m) of head difference across small horizontal distances of less than 1 mile. These gradients are interpreted as discontinuities in the fluid-flow regime of the Powder River basin. The internal shape of the anomalies is difficult to determine because data are sparse. However, piecewise continuous least-squares analyses indicate that many of the anomalies contain a nearly horizontal internal potentiometric surface.

Given the discontinuous nature of the constructed potentiometric surfaces and the shape of the pressure anomalies, we conclude that oil-field-size pressure compartments exist in the Powder River basin in the Frontier, Muddy, and Dakota formations.

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