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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Petroleum Generation and Entrapment Above
a Low-Angle Detachment Fault: Blackburn Field,
Eureka County, Nevada
By
Blackburn Field is a structural trap above a Tertiary low-angle extensional fault, designated the Blackburn Detachment Fault (BBDF). The hanging-wall consists of a westward-thickening slice of mid-Paleozoic rock that was detached from the northern end of what is now the Sulphur Springs Range and transported about 3.7 miles (6 km) west. Structurally, the hanging-wall is composed of the gently-dipping western limb and nose of the preexisting Blackburn Anticline; the steeply-dipping eastern limb now crops out in the Sulphur Springs Range. The Blackburn Anticline is one of a set of north-south folds of probable Mesozoic age.
The BBDF hanging-wall is segmented
by at least seven Tertiary high-angle normal
faults which trend NNE-SSW and are
generally downthrown to the west. One
of these 6ults separates two oil pools in
the Blackburn reservoir
.
The stratigraphic section consists of valley fill, Oligocene volcanics, lower Mississippian clastics, and middle Devonian dolostone and dolomitic sandstone. The upper Devonian Devil's Gate Limestone and Pilot Shale are both locally absent by erosion or non-deposition. The lower Mississippian rocks are assigned to the Dale Canyon Formation. By mid-Mississippian time the Dale Canyon was overridden by rocks of the Roberts Mountains Allochthon, which remain preserved in axes of Mesozoic synclines in the Sulphur Springs Range and under western Pine Valley, but which were evidently eroded off the Blackburn Anticline prior to Oligocene time.
Blackburn's Devonian and
Mississippian reservoirs have produced
2.9 MMBO from five web through 6/93,
with ongoing production of over 1700
BOPD. Most of this oil has come from
the middle Devonian Nevada Group
reservoir
, very minor amounts have been
produced from Oligocene volcanics.
The best well in the field is the Petcon
#18 Blackburn, completed in 11/92. This
well produced 323 MBO in it's first eight
months and continues to flow 1400 to
1500 BOPD, water-free. It taps the same
reservoir
as the #16 and #14 wells some
446' above the original oil-water contact
for that pool; the #18 stratigraphy is most
comparable to the #16 well. A drillstem
test of the #18 recovered a nearly full
string of oil with essentially virgin
reservoir
pressure, reflecting the presence of
an underlying water
drive
. Production
casing was cemented and perforated 53'
into the
reservoir
, minor formation damage
was effectively treated with acid, and
the well was put on production.
Calculated initial production was 150
WPD through a 10/64" choke with flowing tubing pressure of 120 psi.
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