About This Item
- Full TextFull Text(subscription required)
- Pay-Per-View PurchasePay-Per-View
Purchase Options Explain
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Chapter from:
(Publication Subject:
Chapter 8
Organic Geochemistry of Cap-Rock Hydrocarbons, Snorre Field, Norwegian North Sea
T.L. Leith
IKU Petroleum Research Trondheim, Norway
A.E. Fallick
Scottish Universities Research and Reactor Centre East Kilbride, Glasgow, Scotland
ABSTRACT
The results confirm that vertical leakage of oil from the reservoir of the Snorre Field
into overlying claystones and marls of the Late Cretaceous Shetland Group has occurred.
The relatively high concentrations of
residual
oil present in the cap rock are
compositionally related to the reservoired Snorre oil, but are enriched in asphaltenes and
polar compounds. The concentration of the
residual
oil gradually decreases toward the top
of the cap-rock unit. Molecular biomarker data allowed monitoring of mixing between leaked
residual
oil and traces of immature indigenous bitumen in the generally organic-lean cap
rock.
Residual
oil in the cap rocks overlying the Snorre Field must have been emplaced
directly from the reservoir by bulk-flow processes. Although the occurrence of a fracture
zone in the cap rock may lead to locally high
residual
oil concentrations, there is no
evidence that major fracture systems are responsible for emplacing the oil found in the
cap rock. The sealing capacity of the cap rock is therefore suggested as being related to
a combination of lithological variation in the cap rock, microfracturing, and hydraulic
equilibrium with the reservoir. The occurrence of calcareous cements with a partially
organic carbon isotope signature suggests that the transit of oil through a cap rock
succession may enhance the sealing capacity of that cap rock under certain circumstances.
Pay-Per-View Purchase Options
The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.
| Watermarked PDF Document: $16 | |
| Open PDF Document: $28 |