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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Law, Ben E., and Charles W. Spencer,
Gas
field: A sweet spot in a regionally pervasive
basin
-
centered
gas
accumulation, Green River and Hoback Basins, Wyoming, in
gas
sandstone reservoir
DOI:10.1306/13511888M1071022
3
The Pinedale
Gas
Field: A Sweet Spot in a Regionally Pervasive
Basin
-
centered
Gas
Accumulation, Green River and Hoback Basins, Wyoming
Gas
Field: A Sweet Spot in a Regionally Pervasive
Basin
-
centered
Gas
Accumulation, Green River and Hoback Basins, WyomingBen E. Law
Pangea Hydrocarbon Exploration, LLC, Lakewood, Colorado, U.S.A. (e-mail: [email protected])
Charles W. Spencer
United States Geological Survey, Retired (e-mail: [email protected])
ABSTRACT
The Green River and Hoback Basins of northwest Wyoming contain very large, regionally pervasive,
basin
-
centered
gas
accumulations (BCGAs). Published estimates of the amount of in-place
gas
resources in the Green River Basin range from 91 to 5036 trillion cubic feet (tcf). The Hoback Basin, like the Green River Basin, contains a BCGA in Cretaceous rocks. In this chapter, we make a distinction between regionally pervasive BCGAs and BCGA sweet spots. The Pinedale field, located in the northern part of the Green River Basin, is one of the largest
gas
fields in America and is a sweet spot in this very large BCGA. By analogy with the Pinedale field, we have also identified a similar BCGA sweet spot in the Hoback Basin. BCGA sweet spots probably always have characteristics in common with conventional accumulations but are different in that they are always contiguous with the underlying more regional BCGA. In this way, they are inseparable from the more regionally pervasive BCGA. We conclude that the probability of forming sweet spots is highly dependent on the presence of faults and/or fractures that have served as conduits for hydrocarbons originating in regional BCGAs. Finally, we propose that the Paleocene “unnamed unit” overlying the Lance Formation be renamed the Wagon Wheel Formation.
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