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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract:
3-D
Seismic
Results in the Discovery of Significant
Reserves Bypassed for 55 Years
3-D
Seismic
Results in the Discovery of Significant
Reserves Bypassed for 55 YearsBy
1Texas Meridian Resources Corp.
2INEXS
The Chocolate Bayou Field is located 25 miles south of Houston, in southeast Brazoria County, Texas. Discovered in 1938, the field has produced over 2 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 65 million barrels of oil from approximately 30 sands and 300 wellbores. The majority of the production is from the sands of the upper and middle Frio (Oligocene) section. Accumulation is found on structural highs on both the downthrown and upthrown side of a major basinward growth fault.
A
3-D
seismic
survey was conducted
over the field in 1988 in an effort
to locate bypassed reserves.
Interpretation
of the
data
revealed an unexpected
paleostructure associated with
a buried and previously undetected
counter-regional fault located almost
three miles south of the structural crest
at the Upper Frio level. Detailed structural
and isochron mapping with adequate
depth conversions indicated
that the structure was prospective for
trapping in the lower Frio sands which
were well developed but wet under the
Upper Frio structural crest.
Although the feature was located
on the absolute edge of the survey the
data
was adequate to locate two wells
which have now been completed in the
lower Frio section. The sands range in
thickness from 65 to 115 feet of net pa
with porosities from 27 to 30%, with
sustained production rates in excess of
10,000 million cubic feet of gas and 140
barrels of oil per day per completion.
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