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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

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Abstract

Chapter from:
AAPG Memoir 67: Previous HitSealsNext Hit, Traps, and the Petroleum System, Edited by R. C. Surdam
(Publication Subject: Oil Methodology, Concepts)
AAPG Memoir 67: Previous HitSealsNext Hit, Traps, and the Petroleum System. Chapter 13: Previous HitStratigraphicNext Hit Controls on the Development and Distribution of Fluid-Pressure Compartments , by R.S. Martinsen, Pages 223-241

Copyright © 1997 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.


Chapter 13

Previous HitStratigraphicNext Hit Controls on the Development and Distribution of Fluid-Pressure Compartments

R.S. Martinsen

Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, U.S.A.

ABSTRACT

Studies in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming indicate that the boundaries of individual fluid pressure compartments commonly correspond to the boundaries of various Previous HitstratigraphicNext Hit elements (e.g., lithofacies and unconformities). This finding leads to the question: "What, then, is the difference between a Previous HitstratigraphicNext Hit Previous HittrapNext Hit and a fluid pressure compartment?" The fundamental difference is that conventional Previous HitstratigraphicNext Hit and structural traps have incomplete capillary seal closure, whereas fluid pressure compartments (of the type observed in the Powder River Basin) have complete capillary seal closure. Most structural traps and many Previous HitstratigraphicNext Hit traps are not completely bounded by low-permeability rocks and have discrete spillpoints. They cannot achieve complete capillary seal closure and are incapable of becoming pressure compartments. Even the many Previous HitstratigraphicNext Hit traps (and fewer structural traps) that are enclosed by low-permeability rocks do not all comprise pressure compartments. In order for a hydrocarbon reservoir to be enclosed by capillary Previous HitsealsNext Hit, not only must it be enclosed by low-permeability rocks, it must be either completely filled (lack a hydrocarbon-free water contact) or enclosed by low-permeability rocks that contain multiple fluid phases. These conditions are more likely met in reservoirs completely enclosed within, or closely associated with, mature source rocks. The distribution and characteristics of fluid pressure compartments observed in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming are discussed within the framework of these types of Previous HitstratigraphicTop variables.

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