About This Item
- Full text of this item is not available.
- Abstract PDFAbstract PDF(no subscription required)
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Subsurface Vents Under the Gulf of Mexico Shelf:
Characteristics and Significance for Hydrocarbon
Migration and Trapping
By
Stone Energy Corporation
Houston, TX
Mud volcanoes throughout the world erupt with mixtures of mud, brine and hydrocarbons. As the apex of expulsion systems, these features give insight into the process of hydrocarbon expulsion and shale dewatering at depth. Many eruptions are believed to be sourced from overpressured shales lying at great depths.
Compact structures observed on seismic data near the top of geopressure appear to be at the root of expulsion systems and are interpreted as “subsurface vents” where fluids are expelled from overpressured shales into the transitional and normally pressured section above. The structures are located downthrown on deeply rooted faults. Collapse topographies surrounding the vents appear to have been created by fluid withdrawal from geopressured shales subjacent and upthrown to the vents. As fluid expulsion is often linked with fault movement, the vertical reach of conducting faults above these vents may be governed by the effective fountainhead of the ascending pressured fluids. Bright spots occasionally stream from these faults and may be evidence of actively migrating hydrocarbons.
The significance of subsurface vents related to petroleum exploration
is two fold. First, subsurface vents appear to be almost
always charged. In fact, this author has yet to document a
case that lacks hydrocarbon
accumulations
. Additionally, these
structures are often filled to the spill point with reserves in the
range of 5 to 50 BCF. Second, subsurface vents may be important
point sources of hydrocarbon migration
into larger fields nearby. A better understanding
of these structures and their
evolution may aid in
predicting
hydrocarbon
accumulations
in neighboring
structures and lead to a knowledge of
specific migration pathways within a
basin.
End_of_Record - Last_Page 19---------------