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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Petroleum Consultant, 1511 18th Avenue East, Seattle, Washington
98112.
Gratitude is expressed to Mark Myers and Rich Kornbrath, State of Alaska
Department of Natural Resources, for data and discussion helpful in writing
this paper, as well as their reviews of the manuscript. Appreciation is
also extended to Floyd Bardsley for artwork.
Send reprint requests to AAPG Publications Manager, P. O. Box 979, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74101-0979.
abstract
Recent discovery of commercial reserves at Alpine field in the Colville
River Delta area, immediately adjacent to the northeastern border of the
NPRA, marks a new stage in the exploration of this region. Alpine contains
an estimated 1.0 billion bbl oil in place and 340-370 MMbbl (million barrels)
recoverable reserves in previously undiscovered Upper Jurassic shallow-marine
sandstones (Alpine sandstone). The Alpine reservoir is the uppermost of
three separate oil-bearing sandstones in the upper Kingak Shale, a major
source rock interval. Although data from most wells in the new field remain
confidential, existing information suggests the accumulation is stratigraphically
entrapped. If this information is confirmed, this would vitalize previously
overlooked play concepts in the NPRA. The building of new facilities at
Alpine will also lower the minimum threshold field size for commercial
production in the northeastern NPRA.
The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPRA) is a vast frontier with
only about 50 exploratory wells drilled within its borders during the past
half-century. Located west and southwest of the supergiant Prudhoe Bay-Kuparuk
River complex, the NPRA is composed of four major structural- stratigraphic
provinces: Barrow arch, Colville foreland basin, foothills belt, and northern
Brooks Range overthrust. Stratigraphy is divided into three megasequences,
including the Ellesmerian (Mississippian-Early Jurassic), Beaufortian (Middle
Jurassic-Early Cretaceous), and Brookian (Early Cretaceous-Tertiary) sequences.
Known oil and gas accumulations within the NPRA are associated with Ellesmerian,
Beaufortian, and Brookian source rocks and Beaufortian and Brookian reservoir
sandstones, and occur in local structures along the Barrow arch and in
the foothills province. Due to their relatively small size and distance
from existing infrastructure, these fields are noncommercial at present.
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