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Gamero Diaz, H., C. Contreras, N. Lewis, R. Welsh, and C. Zavala,, 2009, Evidence of shelfal hyperpycnal deposition of Pliocene sandstones in the Oilbird field, southeast coast, Trinidad: Impact on reservoir distribution, in R. M. Slatt and C. Zavala, eds., Sediment transfer from shelf to deep water—Revisiting the delivery system: AAPG Studies in Geology 61, p. 193–214.

DOI:10.1306/13271357St613443

Copyright copy2011 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

Evidence of Shelfal Hyperpycnal Deposition of Pliocene Sandstones in the Oilbird Field, Southeast Coast, Trinidad: Impact on Reservoir Distribution

Helena Gamero Diaz,1 Carmen Contreras,2 Neil Lewis,3 Robert Welsh,4 Carlos Zavala5

1Schlumberger Technology Corp., Addison, Texas, U.S.A.
2Schlumberger Technology Corp., Addison, Texas, U.S.A.
3EOG Resources Trinidad Limited, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
4EOG Resources Trinidad Limited, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
5GCS Argentina, Universidad Nacional del Sur, Bahia Blanca, Argentina

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This chapter presents the results of a sedimentologic study on the Oilbird field for EOG Resources Trinidad Limited. Mark Larsen and Maria Lourdes Diaz de Gamero provided reviews of the manuscript. We thank EOG Resources Trinidad Limited for giving its permission to publish the results of this study.

ABSTRACT

The Pliocene B4 sandstone is an important gas-bearing reservoir in the Oilbird field, Columbus Basin, southeast Trinidad. The B4 sandstone is dominated by fine-grained, massive, and parallel-laminated sandstones interbedded with thinly laminated siltstone and very fine-grained sandstones deposited in a shelfal setting. A detailed sedimentologic study of the B4 reservoir was performed by integrating 60 ft (18.3 m) of core, 3770 ft (1149 m) of borehole image data, open-hole logs, mud logs, and biostratigraphic data. A total of 12 sedimentary facies were described and interpreted on the basis of sedimentation processes using a genetically oriented facies analysis approach. Six facies associations were identified based on the gamma ray (GR) pattern and the vertical facies association. Core data show mostly massive sandstones with very little to no bioturbation. These massive sandstones commonly alternate with intervals having diffuse lamination, which appear as a recurrent feature within the massive bodies. The transitional recurrence of massive and parallel-laminated sandstones indicates velocity fluctuating and sustained turbulent flows. Sedimentologic evidences suggest that the origin of the B4 sandstone could be related to the paleo-Orinoco River-related product of turbidity (hyperpycnal) outflows that extended into the Columbus Basin. The associated occurrence of plant debris favors the interpretation of a direct fluvial supply by rivers in flood stage (hyperpycnal systems).

The lateral correlation of facies associations throughout seven wells allowed the identification of six depositional units, named from base to top, A, B, C, D, E, and F. Facies maps for the B4 reservoir have been developed and were constrained by paleocurrent data extracted from image data. The B4 reservoir sand shows a progradational pattern reflecting the infill of a fault-controlled depocenter. Paleoflow data indicate axial transport roughly parallel to the main fault system, indicating that faults were active and controlled the accommodation space. The proposed hyperpycnal depositional model will introduce substantial changes for the prediction of the geometry and position of sandstone accumulations. The hyperpycnal model predicts the occurrence of sand accumulations in the lower parts of the paleolandscape, whereas the higher parts of the basin (margins) are characterized by fine-grained sediments. Thus, this new depositional model could represent a drastic shift in the prospectivity guide for new exploration plays.

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