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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 86, No. 11 (November 2002), P. 1921-1938.

Copyright ©2002. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

Fractured Previous HitshaleNext Hit-Previous HitgasNext Hit systems

John B. Curtis1

1Department of Geology and Geological Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado 80401; email: [email protected]

AUTHORS

John B. Curtis is associate professor and director, Petroleum Exploration and Production Center/Potential Previous HitGasNext Hit Agency at the Colorado School of Mines. He is an associate editor for the AAPG Bulletin and The Mountain Geologist. As director of the Potential Previous HitGasNext Hit Agency, he works with a team of 145 geologists, geophysicists, and petroleum engineers in their biennial assessment of remaining United States natural Previous HitgasNext Hit resources.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

It has been my pleasure and a continuing education for the last 25 years to work with many excellent scientists and engineers on the challenges presented by Previous HitshaleNext Hit-Previous HitgasNext Hit systems. United States Previous HitshaleNext Hit-Previous HitgasNext Hit production and future world opportunities certainly would be limited without the insights gained from the Eastern Previous HitGasNext Hit Shales Project of the U.S. Department of Energy and from research sponsored by the Previous HitGasNext Hit Research Institute/Previous HitGasNext Hit Technology Institute. I particularly acknowledge the enthusiasm and vision of the late Charles Brandenburg and of Charles Komar. Thoughtful reviews by Kent Bowker, Robert Cluff, and David Hill significantly improved this manuscript. I also thank Daniel Jarvie for his review of my Barnett Previous HitShaleNext Hit discussion. Ira Pasternack provided helpful discussions concerning the Antrim Previous HitShaleNext Hit. The technical editing and graphic skills of Steve Schwochow are greatly appreciated. Finally, I thank Ben Law for his energy and patience in completion of this project.

ABSTRACT

The first commercial United States natural Previous HitgasNext Hit production (1821) came from an organic-rich Devonian Previous HitshaleNext Hit in the Appalachian basin. Understanding the geological and geochemical nature of organic Previous HitshaleNext Hit formations and improving their Previous HitgasNext Hit producibility have sub sequently been the challenge of millions of dollars worth of research since the 1970s. Previous HitShaleNext Hit-Previous HitgasNext Hit systems essentially are continuous-type biogenic (predominant), thermogenic, or combined biogenic-thermogenic Previous HitgasNext Hit accumulations characterized by widespread Previous HitgasNext Hit satu ration, subtle trapping mechanisms, seals of variable lithology, and relatively short hydrocarbon migration distances. Previous HitShaleNext Hit Previous HitgasNext Hit may be stored as free Previous HitgasNext Hit in natural fractures and intergranular porosity, as Previous HitgasNext Hit sorbed onto kerogen and clay-particle surfaces, or as Previous HitgasNext Hit dis solved in kerogen and bitumen.

Five United States Previous HitshaleNext Hit formations that presently produce Previous HitgasNext Hit commercially exhibit an unexpectedly wide variation in the values of five key parameters: thermal maturity (expressed as vitrinite reflectance), sorbed-Previous HitgasNext Hit fraction, reservoir thickness, total organic car bon content, and volume of Previous HitgasNext Hit in place. The degree of natural fracture development in an otherwise low-matrix-permeability Previous HitshaleNext Hit reservoir is a controlling factor in Previous HitgasNext Hit producibility. To date, unstimulated commercial production has been achievable in only a small proportion of Previous HitshaleNext Hit wells, those that intercept natural fracture networks. In most other cases, a successful Previous HitshaleNext Hit-Previous HitgasNext Hit well requires hydraulic stimulation. Together, the Devonian Antrim Previous HitShaleNext Hit of the Michigan basin and Devonian Ohio Previous HitShaleNext Hit of the Appalachian basin accounted for about 84% of the total 380 bcf of Previous HitshaleNext Hit Previous HitgasNext Hit produced in 1999. However, annual Previous HitgasNext Hit production is steadily increasing from three other major organic Previous HitshaleNext Hit formations that subsequently have been explored and developed: the Devonian New Albany Previous HitShaleNext Hit in the Illinois basin, the Mississippian Barnett Previous HitShaleNext Hit in the Fort Worth basin, and the Cretaceous Lewis Previous HitShaleNext Hit in the San Juan basin.

In the basins for which estimates have been made, Previous HitshaleNext Hit-Previous HitgasNext Hit resources are substantial, with in-place volumes of 497-783 tcf. The estimated technically recoverable resource (exclusive of the Lewis Previous HitShaleNext Hit) ranges from 31 to 76 tcf. In both cases, the Ohio Previous HitShaleTop ac counts for the largest share.

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