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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received April 8, 1996; revised manuscript received
September 17, 1997; final acceptance March 2, 1998.
2Department of Geological Sciences, Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York 14853.
Funding for this work was provided by the Global Basins Research Network
and Department of Energy grant DC-FC22-93BC14961 to Roger Anderson, Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory, with subcontract to Larry Cathles, Cornell University.
I especially thank Pennzoil Exploration and Production Company, and their
partners Exxon, Mobil, and Cockrell Oil Corporation, without whose involvement
the Pathfinder well would not have been drilled. Paleontological analysis
was done by Ardy Callender and Bernie Shaffer, Applied Biostratigraphix,
Houston, and elucidated by Denise Butler, Pennzoil. Formation MicroImage
interpretation was performed by Laura Foulk, Schlumberger. Bruce Hart,
presently of the New Mexico Geological Survey, assisted with core logging.
Quantitative x-ray diffraction work was done under the supervision of Peter
Vrolijk, Exxon Production Research. I thank Bruce Malamud, Ben Brooks,
and Don Turcotte for assistance with statistical analysis, Laurel Alexander
for a preprint of her paper with Jim Handschy, and Mark Zoback, Susan Hippler,
and an anonymous reviewer for helpful reviews.
ABSTRACT
The Pathfinder core, collected in the South Eugene Island Block 330
field, offshore Louisiana, provides an outstanding sample of structures
associated with a major growth fault that abuts a giant oil field and that
is thought to have acted as a conduit for hydrocarbon migration into the
producing reservoirs. Where cored, the growth-fault zone cuts semiconsolidated
Pliocene-Pleistocene mudstone and is over 100 m wide. The fault zone in
the core consists of three structural domains, each characterized by a
distinct rock type, distribution of fault dips and dip azimuths, and distribution
of spacing between adjacent faults and fractures. Although all of the domains
contain oil-bearing sands, only faults and fractures in the deepest domain
contain oil, even though the oil-barren fault domains contain numerous
faults and fractures that are parallel to those containing oil in the deepest
domain. The deepest domain is also distinguished from the other two domains
by a greater degree of structural complexity and by a well-defined power-law
distribution of fault and fracture spacings. Sediments in this domain behaved
as competent rock with respect to fault and fracture spacing, whereas the
departure from power-law distribution of fault and fracture spacing in
the other two domains may reflect deformation of unconsolidated sediment.
This departure from a power-law spacing distribution in the upper two domains,
combined with stable isotope data that indicate low-temperature water-rock
interaction within a gouge zone that separates these two fault domains,
indicates that the faults in those domains may have been active only early
in the history of the growth fault zone, when the sampled sediments were
at shallow burial depths. Thus, these faults may predate oil migration.
In contrast, the faults in the oil-bearing domain appear to have been active
later in the fault zones history, when the sediments faulted as competent
rock and when geologic and organic geochemical investigations indicate
oil migrated into the Block 330 reservoirs. Even though oil is present
in sands throughout the core, its restriction to faults and fractures in
the youngest sampled portion of the fault zone implies that oil migrated
only through that part of the fault that was active during the time when
oil had access to it. The absence of oil in fractures or faults in the
other, probably older, fault domains indicates that the oil was never sufficiently
pressured to flow up the fault zone on its own, either by hydraulic fracture
or by increased permeability as a result of decreased effective stress.
Instead, fluid migration along faults and fractures in the Pathfinder core
was enhanced by permeability created in response to relatively far-field
stresses related to minibasin subsidence.
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