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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Deepwater Depositional Processes and Stratigraphy
of the Atlanta Field: Santos Basin, Block BS-4,
Offshore Brazil
Shell
Brazil Deepwater Development Team
Houston, Texas
The Atlanta Field, located in the northern Santos Basin, offshore Brazil, is a world-class turbidite reservoir with over 1.5 billion barrels of heavy oil in place. The 115 meter thick, high net-to-gross reservoir, exhibits porosities over 35% along with multi-darcy permeability. The Eocene age, shallow reservoir (-2400 m) is well imaged on 3-D seismic, including a “textbook quality” seismic flat-spot defining the oil-water contact. The field was discovered in 2001 and has been appraised with three additional well bores. An additional appraisal well followed by a phased development is currently planned.
The Atlanta reservoir is part of a 600 km2 channelized slope apron complex deposited on a stepped-slope topography during the Eocene. The slope apron was fed through several southeasttrending slope channels and is interpreted to have been sourced by the collapse of nearby shelf-margin deltas. Within the lower reservoir section, seismic interpretation reveals a broad incised valley with nearly 100% net-to-gross sand fill. Within that incised valley fill, stratal slicing shows systematic migration patterns that are more often seen in steeper slope channels and are unusual in a low-gradient and sand-rich setting. These pass upward into more distributary channel and lobate forms. Well data show a corresponding split between lower massive sands and an upper more heterogeneous section characterized by the occurrence of shale-clast conglomerate layers within high-quality sands.
Despite the good reservoir quality, development of this reservoir presents challenges due to the viscous crude. A detailed understanding of structural and stratigraphic heterogeneity is required in order to reduce uncertainty in reservoir performance. To achieve this, a data acquisition and integrated interpretation program was conducted as part of field appraisal. Interpretation of reprocessed 3-D seismic to enhance stratigraphic detail, from sub-regional down to seismic loop scale, has enabled a detailed interpretation of the geometry of this channelized apron. The observations suggest that the system was overall strongly aggradational, consisting of a limited number of channel and lobate elements. Use of borehole image logs calibrated to limited cores and coupled with a database of outcrop and subsurface analogs allows for subsurface recognition and quantification of potential baffles and barriers to flow within the reservoir. Our integrated subsurface interpretation approach provides a framework for generating multiple scenarios of the reservoir architecture and spatial distribution of key heterogeneities in the static models that will be used to forecast reservoir performance in this sand-rich turbidite system.