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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 50, No. 02, October 2007. Page 25-25.

Abstract: Understanding Wilcox 1 and Wilcox 2 Reservoir Distribution at Jack Prospect (It’s possible that you don’t know Jack!)

R. Tom Mooney, Morgan D. Sullivan and Larry Zarra
Chevron

Chevron’s 2004 Jack Prospect oil discovery encountered more than 350 feet of net pay oil sands in the Wilcox (Upper Paleocene) in approximately 7,000 feet of water in the Gulf of Mexico. Chevron cored the Wilcox 1 reservoir, which was interpreted to represent truly unconfined basin-floor turbiditic sheets. The following year Chevron drilled Jack #2 well approximately a mile from the #1 and cored both the Wilcox 1 and Wilcox 2 reservoirs. As in the Jack #1 well, the Wilcox 1 cores were interpreted as unconfined sheets, but the Wilcox 2 core was interpreted as confined channel deposits. We used commonly recognized criteria to interpret and differentiate between unconfined sheet elements and confined channel elements.

Sub-salt seismic data in the Jack area are generally poor and lack the resolution to effectively characterize the reservoirs. Consequently, we used core analysis, log correlation and depositional models to characterize the Wilcox 1 & 2 reservoirs. Both channel and sheet elements are part of a larger 3D body interpreted to be a distributary lobe. The distributary lobe depositional model is the result of previous outcrop research and subsurface analogs. Using the interpreted elements and previously derived aspect ratios (width to thickness ratios), we were able to provide dimensions and reservoir distributions for each element, as well as for the larger distributary lobes.

In 2006, the Jack #2 well was successfully tested and sustained a flow rate of more than 6,000 barrels of crude oil per day.

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