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P. Boult and J. Kaldi, eds., 2005, Evaluating fault and cap rock seals: AAPG Hedberg Series, no. 2, p. 199-213.

DOI:10.1306/1060765H23157

Copyright copy2005 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

Distinct-element Stress Previous HitModelingTop in the Penola Trough, Otway Basin, South Australia

Suzanne P. Hunt,1 Peter J. Boult2

1Australian School of Petroleum, Petroleum Engineering Discipline, University of Adelaide, Australia
2Australian School of Petroleum, University of Adelaide, Australia and also Department of Primary Industry and Resources South Australia, Adelaide, Australia

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Origin Energy for their provision of interpreted horizon maps and general discussion on the field status. We also thank Bronwyn Camac for her identification of stress perturbations around some of the major faults in the Penola Trough and also her identification of open tensile fractures in the Laira Formation away from major faults. In addition, we also thank the Stress Group, led by Richard Hillis at the Australian School of Petroleum, for the fruitful discussions we have had. Without them, in particular, Scott Mildren, who contributed Figure 10, which was previously unpublished, we probably would not have done this research. We also thank Alton Brown and Helen Lewis for constructive criticism and suggestions that helped improve the manuscript.

ABSTRACT

The Penola Trough of the Otway Basin, South Australia, is host to five economic gas fields containing an estimated 120 bcf of original gas in place in fault-related traps. However, throughout this trough, many other fault-dependent traps contain paleocolumns or partial paleocolumns. In 2001, the Balnaves 1 well discovered a semibreached structure. This structure was originally thought to be low risk because its associated fault was optimally oriented to seal with respect to the interpreted present-day maximum horizontal stress direction. On subsequent analysis of the wellbore image data, an open conductive fracture network was observed in the seal around the main bounding fault.

We propose that perturbations of the regional stress field around preexisting faults may open a fracture network in the seal. This hypothesis is tested for the Laira Formation (cap seal) using the finite-difference distinct-element method (DEM). To our knowledge, this technique has not previously been used to assess seal integrity.

The DEM has been used before for estimating perturbations around faults. The current work first summarizes and expands previous investigations of the perturbations developed in the two-dimensional (2-D) (horizontal) local maximum (sigma1) and minimum (sigma3) stress magnitudes produced around a single fault, it then uses this understanding to create and assess a 2-D DEM Penola Trough model.

For a single fault, the magnitude of perturbations were examined as a function of k = sigma1/sigma3, theta (the angle between sigma1 direction and the fault strike), friction angle phi, and fault stiffness jkn and jks. The magnitude of stress perturbations are highly sensitive to k, theta, and phi, but less sensitive to fault stiffness. This insight is applied to horizontal 2-D models to identify areas of potential cap rock failure.

In a 2-D study of the Penola Trough areas of high shear stress are modeled where breached hydrocarbon columns are known to occur. We interpret areas of high shear stress to be zones of fractured rock and possible cap rock failure. Predicting zones of cap rock failure using DEM models could prove to be a very useful exploration tool in locations where cap rocks are known to be brittle and have suffered recent tectonic strain.

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