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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 48, No. 2, October 2005. Pages 21-21.

Abstract: New Insights on the Hydrocarbon System of the Fruitland Formation Coalbeds, San Juan Basin

By

W.C. Riese1, W.L. Pelzmann1, Glen T. Snyder2, and G.K. Arp3
1 BP America Production Co., Houston, TX
2 Rice University, Earth Science Department, Houston, TX
3 Booze Allen Hamilton, Las Cruces, NM

The Fruitland Formation is the world’s largest known and most productive coalbed methane deposit, with 45 TCF of gas. This important hydrocarbon system originates from a unique combination of depositional environments, tectonic framework, and structural and landscape evolution. This system is more complex than recognized by previous workers. The presence of biogenic gas in the formation is recognized, and is thought to indicate contemporary meteoric recharge of the formation. We conclude recharge of the regolith is taking place, but that biogenic methane is probably sourced by microbes introduced to the formation 35 to 40 million years (Ma) ago.

Previous discussions of the coal hydrology focused on meteoric waters thought to be recharging the coals today. Our work indicates that four distinct waters are present in the coals. Connate waters fill the formation in the center of the basin. Meteoric recharge is restricted to coal and regolith no more than a few kilometers from the outcrop.Meteoric water found farther down dip is fossil meteoric water and reflects recharge between 35 and 40 Ma.Waters from deeper formations also locally recharge fractures in the coals.

The Paleozoic architecture of the basin continues to influence fluid flow in the coals. Fractures or faults in the coals may be contributory to the high permeabilities found in the high-rate fairway, a cluster of wells with larger recoverable reserves that produce at rates of up to 10,000 MCFPD; the structure could also explain the fairway’s abrupt southern boundary. The Cenozoic Rio Grande rift event imposed a second fracture set. Intersection of these fracture sets with the outcrop provides the locus for most methane seeps.

Methane seeps at the coal outcrop have been active for decades. The presence of these seeps is due in part to continued weathering and breaching of biosome-scale reservoir compartments, a process which is more rapid along fracture systems. Our work finds that seep activity varies on a thirty-year cycle. We attribute this cyclicity to variations in the frequency of magnitude-3 or greater earthquakes, which also varies on a thirty-year cycle. The epicenters of these quakes closely correspond with the areas of most active seepage. As such, pulses in seep activity are due to the result of releases from deeper reservoirs whose seals are periodically breached.

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