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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 92, No. 3 (March 2008), P. 283-309.

Copyright copy2008. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI:10.1306/11120707084

Mesozoic (Upper JurassicndashLower Cretaceous) deep gas reservoir play, central and eastern Gulf coastal plain

Ernest A. Mancini,1 Peng Li,2 Donald A. Goddard,3 Victor Ramirez,4 Suhas C. Talukdar5

1Center for Sedimentary Basin Studies and Department of Geological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487; [email protected]
2Arkansas Geological Survey, Little Rock, Arkansas 72204; [email protected]
3Center for Energy Studies, Louisiana State University, Energy, Coast amp Environment Building, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803; [email protected]
4Center for Sedimentary Basin Studies and Department of Geological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487; present address: ECOPETROL, Bogota, Colombia; [email protected]
5Baseline Resolution, Inc., 143 Vision Park Blvd., Shenandoah, Texas 77384; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

The Mesozoic (Upper Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous) deeply buried gas reservoir play in the central and eastern Gulf coastal plain of the United States has high potential for significant gas resources. Sequence-stratigraphic study, petroleum system analysis, and resource assessment were used to characterize this developing play and to identify areas in the North Louisiana and Mississippi Interior salt basins with potential for deeply buried gas reservoirs. These reservoir facies accumulated in Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous Norphlet, Haynesville, Cotton Valley, and Hosston continental, coastal, and marine siliciclastic environments and Smackover and Sligo nearshore marine shelf, ramp, and reef carbonate environments. These Mesozoic strata are associated with transgressive and regressive systems tracts. In the North Louisiana salt basin, the estimate of secondary, nonassociated thermogenic gas generated from thermal cracking of oil to gas in the Upper Jurassic Smackover source rocks from depths below 3658 m (12,000 ft) is 4800 tcf of gas as determined using software applications. Assuming a gas expulsion, migration, and trapping efficiency of 2–3%, 96–144 tcf of gas is potentially available in this basin. With some 29 tcf of gas being produced from the North Louisiana salt basin, 67–115 tcf of in-place gas remains. Assuming a gas recovery factor of 65%, 44–75 tcf of gas is potentially recoverable. The expelled thermogenic gas migrated laterally and vertically from the southern part of this basin to the updip northern part into shallower reservoirs to depths of up to 610 m (2000 ft).

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