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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
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Abstract
DOI:10.1306/1033714M853130
2005 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.
Estimating the Amount of Oil and Gas Accumulation from Top
Seal
and Trap Geometry


Fuminori Sawamura,1 Kazuo Nakayama2
1Geology Department, JGI, Inc., Tokyo, Japan; Present address: Chiba University Graduate School of Science and Technology, Chiba, Japan.
2Geology Department, JGI, Inc., Tokyo, Japan
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank the Technology Research Center of the Japan National Oil Corporation (presently Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation) for being part of the development of equivalent grain size method. The authors thank Rasoul Sorkhabi of University of Utah for encouraging the publication of this article. The AN and YA fields are located in Russia; however, the exact location cannot be disclosed because of confidentiality. We are highly thankful to Mark M. Mandelbaum (Ministry of Natural Resources, Russia) for the permission to publish Figures 11 and 12. We also express our gratitude to Grant Skerlec and John Sneider whose comments greatly improved this chapter.
ABSTRACT
Oil and gas volumes are controlled by top-seal
capillary
properties
, spillpoints, and trap geometry. The top-
seal
capillary
properties
and
seal
capacity can be estimated from the equivalent grain size (EGS) method. The EGS method uses an experimentally derived relationship between pore-throat size, porosity, and grain size to evaluate
seal
capacity. A
pure spillpoint-limited trap
is one in which the hydrocarbon column height is determined solely by the spillpoints. The observed hydrocarbon column in this trap is less than that which can be held by top-
seal
capacity. This trap type will be dominated by gas. In a
capillary
and spillpoint mixed trap,
where both oil and gas can be filled down to the spillpoint, both top-
seal
capacity and spillpoint
control
relative oil and gas column heights. A
pure
capillary
-limited trap
is that where the oil and gas are not filled down to the spillpoint.
Top seal
and spillpoint have been the focus of
seal
analyses; however, a case study for fields referred to as AN and YA in this chapter demonstrates an important relationship between trap geometry and top-
seal
capacity. These two fields have the same top-
seal
capacity, but the total column heights, as well as the relative oil and gas columns, are very different. This is explained by the different ratios of the base area to its relief in the two fields. The ratio of the area to its relief of the AN field is smaller, whereas that of the YA field is much larger. Given the same top-
seal
capacity, a trap with a higher area-to-relief ratio can hold a larger gas column because the oil pushed down by the migrated gas reduces its column height remarkably.
Thus, the EGS method can provide new insights into understanding hydrocarbon fill patterns in fields and prospects, including fault traps.
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