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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Chapter from:
Edited by
Chapter 2
Mark J. Osborne1
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Durham, Durham, United
Kingdom
1Present Affiliation: BP
Exploration, Shared Petrotechnical Resource,
Basin Modeling and Geochemistry, Middlesex,
United Kingdom
Abstract
buoyancy
. The principal mechanisms which result in large magnitude
overpressure are disequilibrium compaction and fluid volume expansion during gas
generation. Disequilibrium compaction results from rapid burial (high sedimentation rates)
of low-permeability rocks such as shales, and is characterized on
pressure
vs. depth plots
by a fluid retention depth where overpressure commences, and increases downwards along a
gradient which can closely follow the lithostatic (overburden) gradient. Disequilibrium
compaction is typical in basins with a high sedimentation rate, including Tertiary deltas
and some intracratonic basins. In older basins, disequilibrium compaction generated
earlier in the basin history may be preserved only in thick, fine-grained sequences, but
lost by vertical/lateral leakage from rocks with relatively high permeabilities. Gas
generation from secondary maturation reactions, and oil cracking in the deeper parts of
sedimentary basins, can result in large fluid volume increases, although the magnitudes
are uncertain. In addition, the effect of increased pressures on the reactions involved is
unknown. We doubt that any of the other mechanisms involving volume change can contribute
significant regional overpressure, except in very unusual conditions. Hydraulic head and
hydrocarbon
buoyancy
are mechanisms whose contributions are generally small; however, they
can be easily assessed and may be important when additive to other mechanisms. The effects
of transference of overpressure generated elsewhere should always be considered, since the
present
pressure
distribution will be strongly affected by the ability of fluids to move
along lateral and vertical conduits. Naturally underpressured reservoirs (as opposed to
underpressure during depletion) have not been as widely recognized, being restricted
mainly to interior basins which have undergone uplift and temperature reduction. The
likely principal causes are hydraulic discharge, rock dilation during erosional unroofing,
and gas migration during uplift.
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