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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
West Texas Geological Society
Abstract
Abstract: Understanding Unconventional Resource Potential by Conventional Petroleum Systems Assessment
Abstract
The Permian Basin has a long standing history of oil and gas production and has attained yet another renaissance due to unconventional shale resource systems for gas and, currently, for oil and natural gas liquids. Although these are unconventional systems, understanding conventional petroleum systems enables a description of potential unconventional resource systems by inferences derived from the geochemistry of conventionally produced oils. While only limited information on Permian Basin petroleum systems have been made public, most
source
rocks have been identified by those working the basin, although some potential
source
intervals, and certainly variability in
source
rocks, have not been studied or reported extensively.
Inferences from geochemical oil analyses suggests at least six different
source
rocks with organofacies variations. These conventionally produced dead oil samples have been typed using high resolution gas chromatography, carbon isotopes, biomarkers, and sulfur contents. The following
source
and lithofacies inferences can be made from these results:
Inferred
source
rock
and lithofacies
-
Permian (Leonardian) Bone Springs
-
marly shale
-
carbonate
-
-
Permian (Guadalupian) shale
-
Permian Wolfcamp
-
shale
-
carbonate
-
-
Ordovician
-
G. prisca
-
non-G. prisca
-
One key point from these inferred lithofacies is that carbonate and marly shale sourced oils will have variable hydrocarbon generation kinetics with carbonates generating at lower thermal stress than shales, but having lower API gravity due to higher amounts of resins and asphaltenes also with higher concentrations of sulfur-bearing compounds that can impact fluid handling and economics.
Establishing the effective
source
rock
for various conventional reservoirs requires correlation of
source
rock
extracts to oils. Effective
source
rocks are targets for unconventional resource development depending on various factors such as thickness and depth to the interval. Analytical work confirms various
source
rock
intervals and their characterstics as well as identifying additional sources that have not been documented. For example, prospective
source
rocks in the basin such as the Bell and Cherry Canyon formations.
Understanding the potential production of unconventional oil from tight reservoirs requires a detailed understanding of the system much as unconventional shale gas, but with different parameters. One basic parameter that demonstrates the presence of potentially producible oil is the oil crossover effect or oil saturation index (OSI) (Jarvie, 2011). In addition, while quartz content is very important in shale gas plays as it reflects increased brittleness, in shale oil resource plays carbonate contents become equally important.
A shale resource system can be described as an unconventional resource by using the terms typical and atypical for description of a reservoir
rock
. As such shales are not typical reservoir rocks although they have served as such for some time. An unconventional or atypical system could be predominantly a quartz-clay system such as the Barnett Shale oil play where a clay/quartz-rich system is the productive horizon or a hybrid shale resource system where an organic-rich
source
rock
may contribute to production but primary production is from juxtaposed (overlying, interbedded, or underlying) organic-lean horizons, typically carbonates, that are tight but productive with stimulation.
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