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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Revisiting the Subsalt Trap Archetype Classification
Scheme After Nine More Years of Gulf of Mexico
Subsalt Drilling
BP America Inc.
Subsalt exploration in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) remains an area of intense focus by the oil and gas industry. Finding economic hydrocarbon accumulations beneath the extensive allochthonous salt sheets in the northern GOM basin requires solving a number of geophysical, geological, and drilling challenges. In 2001, we presented a subsalt trap classification which, given seismic imaging challenges associated with complex allochthonous salt, could be used for qualitatively ranking subsalt exploration prospects according to their structural attributes (Hart and Albertin, 2001 GCSSEPM).
This classification is comprised of a collection of subsalt trap archetypes, with each archetype representing an important structural variation carrying specific trap and hydrocarbon charge risks. These archetypes are grouped into four genetic play families, calibrated for overall prospectivity by a statistical analysis of subsalt well results. Our original 2001 analysis used a calibrating database of 67 subsalt tests; since then, at least 121 new subsalt traps have been tested by industry. We used these new subsalt well data to revisit the classification scheme and answer two basic questions: (1) is the overall trap family ranking corroborated by drilling results of the past nine years, and (2) are any revisions to the classification scheme warranted?
Overall, the subsalt trap family prioritization remains valid.
All but three of the 44 subsalt discoveries drilled since 2001
can be attributed to the top-ranked autochthon-rooted trap
family. Of the three exceptions, only one discovery could be
positively attributed to one of the other subsalt trap families.
Analysis of the new drilling results does, however, suggest the
following descriptive and statistical updates to the top-tier
autochthon-rooted trap family:
1. the cumulative success rate for autochthon-rooted traps,currently at 41%, has been favorably impacted by the
emergence of the Paleogene (Wilcox) play trend;
2. the autochthon-rooted trap family has been broadened to
include all subsalt traps directly underlain by deep Mesozoic
salt, whether in the form of Cretaceous allochthons, crept
autochthonous salt on younger basement, or true in-situ
autochthonous salt;
3. the top-tier autochthon-rooted trap family can be usefully
subdivided into sub-families which are, in turn, ranked for
overall trap and hydrocarbon charge risk;
4. a large, calibrating database of 188 subsalt prospect tests from
across the GOM affirms the new sub-family rankings,
5. drilling results suggest that the industry will be challenged to
maintain its historically high success rate for autochthon-rooted
subsalt traps, as exploration focus shifts from simpler traps of
the lower slope to more complex traps of the middle and upper
slope subsalt trends.