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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

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Abstract


 
Chapter from: M 61: Basin Compartments and Seals 
Edited by 
Peter J. Ortoleva

Authors:
Ronald C. Surdam, Zun Sheng Jiao, and Randi S. Martinsen

Methodology and Concepts

Published 1994 as part of Memoir 61
Copyright © 1994 The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.   All Rights Reserved.
 

Chapter 15

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The Regional Pressure Regime in Cretaceous Sandstones and Shales in the
Powder River Basin

Ronald C. Surdam
Zun Sheng Jiao
Randi S. Martinsen
University of Wyoming
Laramie, Wyoming, U.S.A. 



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ABSTRACT


The Cretaceous shale section in the Powder River basin below a present-day depth of approximately 8000 ± 2000 ft (2400 ± 600 m) typically is overpressured. The top of the transition zone, 500-1000 ft (150-300 m) thick, in the upper portion of the overpressured section occurs within the Steele Formation; and the "hard" overpressured zone, ~2000 ft (600 m) thick, typically begins in the Niobrara Formation, with the base of the zone parallel to the Fuson Shale, the lowermost organic-rich shale in the Cretaceous stratigraphic section. The upper and lower boundaries of the pressure compartment are subparallel to stratigraphic boundaries. Toward the basin margin where the Cretaceous section is at shallow depth (~6000 ft [1800 m]) the overpressured shale section is wedge shaped.

The overpressured Cretaceous shale section in the Powder River basin is a basinwide dynamic pressure compartment. The driving mechanism is the generation of liquid hydrocarbons that subsequently partially react to gas, converting the fluid-flow system to a multiphase regime where capillarity dominates the relative permeability, creating elevated displacement pressures within the shales.

In contrast, many of the Cretaceous sandstones are subdivided into relatively small, isolated pressure or fluid-flow compartments 1 to 10 mi (1.6-16 km) in greatest dimension. The compartmentation is the result of internal stratigraphic elements, such as paleosols along unconformities. These internal stratigraphic elements are low-permeability rocks with finite leak rates in a single-phase fluid-flow system but evolve into relatively impermeable capillary seals with discrete displacement pressures as the flow regime evolves into a multiphase fluid-flow system. This evolution of the fluid-flow system is caused by the addition of hydrocarbons to the fluid phase as a result of continuous burial and increasing thermal exposure. The three-dimensional closure of the capillary seals above, below, and within a sandstone results in isolated fluid-flow or pressure compartments within the sandstone.

 

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