Quaternary lithology and shallow gas from high resolution gravity and seismic data in the central North Sea

2002 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Bauer ◽  
Christine Fichler
Clay Minerals ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 523-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Huggett

AbstractMudrocks and sandstones from the Palaeocene of the central North Sea have been studied to assess the petrology, diagenesis and extent of any chemical interaction between the two lithologies. Authigenic and detrital minerals have been distinguished using a variety of electron microscope techniques. Small but significant quantities of authigenic minerals, which would not be detected by conventional petrographic tools, have been detected through the use of high-resolution electron beam techniques. Sandstone mineralogy has been quantified by point counting, and mudrock mineralogy semi-quantified by XRD. The detrital and authigenic mineralogy in the sandstone is almost identical to that found in the mudrock. The principal difference is in the relative proportions. Qualitative mass balance suggests that cross-formational flow has not been significant in either clay or quartz diagenesis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 ◽  
pp. 104400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Vieira ◽  
Salih Mahdi ◽  
Nicholas Holmes

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Blumenberg ◽  
Stefan Schlömer ◽  
Miriam Römer ◽  
Katja Heeschen ◽  
Hendrik Müller ◽  
...  

<p>Methane is the second most important greenhouse gas and, considering a period of 100 years, has a more than 30 times higher “global warming potential” than carbon dioxide. Emissions from the production, storage, distribution and use of fossil energy resources in recent years sum up to about 15 % of global methane emissions with numbers still being under discussion and topic of numerous research programs.</p><p>Abandoned oil and gas wells are one of the sources of methane from the oil and gas sector. Recent studies found escaping methane at selected abandoned drill holes in the central North Sea. Assuming this would hold for one third of the ~11.000 wells in the region, the process would introduce significant amounts of methane at shallow water depth. Interestingly, the collected methane was of biogenic rather than thermogenic origin, potentially escaping from shallow gas pockets. Likely, this methane was mobilized by mechanical disturbance of the sediments through the drilling operation and the well section has served as a pathway thereafter. However, little is known about the number of wells affected and the relevance for the amounts of methane realeased.</p><p>During a research cruise with the German research vessel Heincke in July, 2019, we studied seafloor characteristics, water column anomalies and sediment methane geochemistry and further inspected visually nine abandoned well sites at ~40 m water depth in the German sector of the central North Sea (Dogger Bank). The cruise targeted different situations, including known seeps in the Dutch part of the Dogger Bank, well sites of different ages and an area where abandoned wells penetrate shallow gas pockets. First data demonstrate that at none of the studied sites concentrations of dissolved methane were enriched in the upper water column. For most sites, sediment and deep water methane data demonstrate concentrations in the range known as background for that area (i.e., deep water methane close to ~ 10 nM). At one site with high indications for the presence of shallow gas pockets, we observed methane abundances several times enriched compared to background. However, the enrichments also occurred 500 m away from the drill site and did not increase towards the center. Based on our data we argue for an active natural seep situation rather than a leaking well and underline that natural seeps may challenge the identification of potentially leaking wells.</p>


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 413-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Edwards ◽  
Sean McQuaid ◽  
Stewart Easton ◽  
Don Scott ◽  
Andrew Couch ◽  
...  

AbstractA rich dataset of core, well logs and 3D seismic data has been integrated to establish a depositional hierarchy of a Paleocene-aged, Forties slope channel system of the Huntington Field, Block 22/14b of the Central North Sea. The reservoir consists of a mix of high-concentration turbidites and muddy and sandy debrites deposited as a series of laterally offset, slope channel fills. Seismic data reveal that the channels were remarkably straight and devoid of meander bends, more commonly associated with sinuous slope channel networks. Paradoxically, the internal offlapping architecture draws close comparisons with lateral accretion packages that are widely accepted to be the products of secondary flow circulation around sinuous channel bends. The straight nature of the Huntington channels precludes such an interpretation but can be explained as a consequence of Coriolis effects acting upon suspension-dominated flows in Northern Hemisphere high latitudes, resulting in the preferential accretion of sediment along the right-hand bank (when viewed downstream) and leading to the eventual lateral avulsion of the channel. The observed architecture has been incorporated into a reservoir model in order to characterize the static connectivity of the field that will in turn serve as a basis for understanding production behaviour.


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 617-646 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Kunka ◽  
G. Williams ◽  
B. Cullen ◽  
J. Boyd-Gorst ◽  
G. R. Dyer ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Nelson Field is located in Blocks 22/11, 22/6a, 22/7 and 22/12a in the UK Central North Sea. Nelson is a simple dip closed structure and is one of a series of Palaeocene Forties Sandstone Member oil accumulations situated on the Forties-Montrose High. The first exploration well on the prospect, 22/11-1, was drilled by Gulf Oil in 1967. Although hydrocarbon shows were encountered in a heterolithic section of Forties Sandstone Member, the well failed to flow on test and was abandoned. 3D seismic data were first acquired in 1985 and led to the discovery of Nelson in 1988 when the 22/11-5 well was drilled by Enterprise Oil plc. Following appraisal drilling, Nelson was granted production consent and the field came on-stream in February 1994. The hydrocarbon type is a light 40° API crude with a GOR of 555 SCF/BBL and is believed to be sourced from the East Forties Basin. The Nelson Field is developed from a 36 slot minimum facilities platform. Currently there are 23 platform producers, four sub-sea producers and four platform water injectors. Oil export is via the Forties Pipeline System and gas export is via the Fulmar Gas System. Oil originally in place is estimated at 790 million barrels of oil (MMBBL). Up to end-1999, the field had produced 261 MMBBL. Since the field was described by Whyatt et al. (1992), a further 28 wells have been drilled resulting in the collection of a considerable amount of new geological and geophysical data. This now includes a total of 6500 ft of Palaeocene core and 4D seismic data. This has enabled a more detailed understanding of the structure and sequence stratigraphy of the Nelson Field. This paper illustrates the importance of seismic mapping, high resolution biostratigraphy and sedimentology in developing the Nelson Field model.


2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 413-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. van Oorschot ◽  
A. Fletcher ◽  
H. Basford ◽  
A. Stuart

AbstractThe Chestnut oilfield was discovered in 1986 and lies within Block 22/2a, Licence P354, of the UK Central North Sea. The field is approximately 7 km south of the Britannia gas condensate field and 8 km SE of the Alba oilfield on the southern edge of the Witch Ground Graben. The field comprises injected Lower Eocene Nauchlan sandstone encased within Horda Formation shales. The Chestnut Field began production in 2008 through the Hummingbird floating production vessel by means of two producer wells and one injector well. The complex reservoir geometries present seismic imaging challenges, and production data have indicated a larger connected volume than mapped from seismic data. In 2017, an infill producer well was drilled to arrest production decline. This well proved the presence and connectivity of sandstone beyond the field interior and increased confidence in using seismic data for predicting the injectite reservoir distribution.


Geophysics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 85 (5) ◽  
pp. B181-B192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florent Colin ◽  
Stéphan Ker ◽  
Bruno Marsset

Very-high-resolution (VHR) marine seismic reflection helps to identify and characterize potential geohazards occurring in the upper part (300 m) of the subseafloor. Although the lateral and vertical resolutions achieved in shallow water depths ([Formula: see text]) using conventional surface-towed technology are adequate, these resolutions quickly deteriorate at greater water depths. The SYstème SIsmique de Fond (SYSIF), a multichannel deep-towed seismic system, has been designed to acquire VHR data (frequency bandwidth [220–1050 Hz] and vertical resolution of 0.6 m) at great water depths. However, the processing of deep-towed multichannel data is challenging because the source and the receivers are constantly moving with respect to each other according to the towing configuration. We have introduced a new workflow that allows the application of conventional processing algorithms to extended deep-towed seismic data sets. First, a relocation of the source and receivers is necessary to obtain a sufficiently accurate acquisition geometry. Variations along the profile in the depth of the deep-towed system result in a complex geometry in which the source and receiver depth vary separately and do not share the same acquisition datum. We have designed a dedicated datuming algorithm to shift the source and receivers to the same datum. Thus, the procedure allows the application of conventional processing algorithms to perform velocity analysis and depth imaging and therefore allows access to the full potential of the seismic system. We have successfully applied this methodology to deep-towed multichannel data from the western Black Sea. In particular, the derived velocity model highlights shallow gas charged anticline structures with unrivaled resolution.


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