GEOLOGICAL CONTROLS ON OVERPRESSURE IN THE NORTHERN CARNARVON BASIN

2001 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 573 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.R. Tingate ◽  
A. Khaksar ◽  
P. van Ruth ◽  
D. Dewhurst ◽  
M. Raven ◽  
...  

A small, but significant fraction of wells drilled in the Northern Carnarvon Basin have encountered problems with overpressure: better pore pressure prediction would improve safety and economy for drilling operations. In the Northern Carnarvon Basin the occurrence of overpressure and likely mechanisms are under investigation as part of the Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre (APCRC) Research Program on Pore Pressure Prediction. Previous workers have proposed a number of mechanisms as the main cause of overpressure including undercompaction, hydrocarbon generation, horizontal stress and clay reactions.A preliminary regional study was undertaken incorporating over 400 well completion reports which identified approximately 60 wells with mud weights greater than 1.25 S.G. A subset of these wells was investigated and more reliable but much scarcer pressure indicators such as kicks or direct pressure measurements were examined. Depth-pressure profiles of wells across the region are variable and commonly show pressure compartmentalisation. Using a range of indicators, it was observed that overpressured strata in the Barrow Subbasin:occur over a wide depth range (2,500 to 4,000+ mbsl);occur over a wide stratigraphic range (Late Triassic to Late Cretaceous);are not regionally limited by major structural boundaries;are associated with sequences dominated by finegrained sediments with variable clay mineralogy; and in depositionally, or structurally, isolated sandstones; andmainly to the west of the Barrow and Dampier Subbasins around the Alpha Arch and Rankin Trend, coinciding with thickest Tertiary deposition.Previous published work in the study area has tended to support hydrocarbon generation as the primary cause of overpressure, though more recent publications have emphasised compaction disequilibrium. The log response (DT, RHOB and NPHI) of overpressured clay-rich strata has been investigated to constrain the type of overpressure mechanism. A normal compaction trend has been derived for four stratigraphic groupings; Muderong Shale, Barrow Group, Jurassic and Triassic. All overpressure occurrences were accompanied by an increase in sonic transit time. Not all wells have suitable log data for evaluation, but all stratigraphic groups show some evidence of elevated porosity associated with overpressure consistent with disequillibrium compaction as a dominant mechanism. Overpressures in the Barrow Group in Minden-1 and the Jurassic section within Zeepaard–1 do not have accompanying porosity anomalies suggesting a different overpressure mechanism model is needed.

2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 375
Author(s):  
Iko Sagala ◽  
Mark Tingay

The Northern Carnarvon Basin is one of Australia’s most prolific hydrocarbon basins. Overpressure has been encountered in numerous wells drilled in the Northern Carnarvon Basin. Knowledge of overpressure distribution is important for drilling and exploration strategies, and understanding the origin of overpressure is essential for applying reliable pore pressure prediction techniques. Unconventional pore pressure indicators—primarily drilling kicks and the presence of connection gas—were used to improve an updated distribution of overpressure and to investigate the origin of overpressure in the Northern Carnarvon Basin. This unconventional dataset was compiled from 45 wells. Overpressures are observed in 40 wells and tend to occur near, or on, the Rankin Platform, Alpha Arch, and Barrow Trend. The presence of overpressure in this area coincides with the region of maximum Cenozoic deposition. Overpressured strata in the Northern Carnarvon Basin occurs through a wide stratigraphic range, from Late Triassic to Paleocene sequences. Generally, post Paleocene sequences in the Northern Carnarvon Basin are considered to be normally pressured. Porosity-vertical effective stress analysis in shale lithologies was used to investigate the origin of overpressure in the Northern Carnarvon Basin. Porosity-vertical effective stress plots from 28 wells in the Northern Carnarvon Basin identified 20 wells where the overpressure appears to be generated by disequilibrium compaction, and eight wells where the overpressure appears to be generated by a component of fluid expansion. Disequilibrium compaction mechanisms were the predominant cause of overpressure in wells around the Rankin Platform and areas located further away from the coast. Conversely, fluid expansion mechanisms were the predominant cause of overpressure in wells around the Alpha Arch and Bambra Trend, and an area located closer to the coast. These results broadly confirm those obtained from earlier studies and highlight the usefulness of kick and connection gas data in overpressure analysis.


2015 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Edward Hoskin ◽  
Stephen O'Connor ◽  
Stephen Robertson ◽  
Jurgen Streit ◽  
Chris Ward ◽  
...  

The Northern Carnarvon Basin has a complicated geological history, with numerous sub-basins containing varying formation thicknesses, lithology types, and structural histories. These settings make pre-drill pore pressure prediction problematic; the high number of kicks taken in wells shows this. Kicks suggest unexpected pore pressure was encountered and mudweights used were below formation pressure. The horst block penetrated by the Parker–1 well is focused on in this peer-reviewed paper. This horst is one of many lying along Rankin Trend’s strike. In this well, kicks up to 17.2 ppg (pounds per gallon) were taken in the Mungaroo reservoir. The authors investigate whether the kicks represent shale pressure—or rather, represent pressure transferred into foot-wall sandstones—by using well data from Forrest 1/1A/1AST1 and Withnell–1, and wells located in the Dampier Sub-basin and the hanging-wall to the horst. This anomalous pressure could result from either cross-fault flow from juxtaposed overpressured Dingo Claystone or transfer up faults from a deeper source. Using a well data derived Vp versus VES trend, the authors establish that the kicks taken in Parker–1 are more likely to result from pressure transfer using faults as conduits. These data lie off a loading trend and appear unloaded but likely represent elevated sand pressures and not in situ shale pressure. Pressure charging up faults in the Northern Carnarvon Basin has been recognised in Venture 1/1ST1, however, this paper presents a focused case study. Pressure transfer is noted in other basins, notably Brunei. From unpublished data, the authors believe that buried horst blocks, up-fault charging and adjacent overpressured shale may explain high reservoir pressures in other basins, including Nam Con Son in Vietnam.


2001 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 367 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.R. Kaiko ◽  
A.M. Tait

The subsidence history of the Northern Carnarvon Basin has been dominated by simple thermal sag following the creation of the Exmouth, Barrow and Dampier Sub-basins by Early to Middle Jurassic rifting. This conclusion follows from the recognition of vitrinite reflectance suppression, which removes the need for recent heating events, and from the use of seismic stratigraphy, rather than only palynology and micro-palaeontology, to determine palaeo-water depths.The simple thermal-sag model, related to Jurassic rifting, accounts for the post-rift sedimentary architecture of the Northern Carnarvon Basin, especially in areas of sediment starvation. It also has implications for the timing of hydrocarbon generation and the reconstruction of migration pathways. This work has re-emphasised the theoretical possibility of determining palaeo-water depths by adjusting one-dimensional basin models to fit simple thermal sag tectonic subsidence curves.Miocene uplift, in the order of several hundred metres, has caused local basin inversion, accentuated some preexisting structures and re-activated some faults causing hydrocarbon remigration, but has otherwise not affected the thermal history of the sediments.


2016 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Gartrell ◽  
Jose Torres ◽  
Matt Dixon ◽  
Myra Keep

Ages varying from Late Triassic to Early Jurassic have been proposed by different authors for the onset of rifting in the Northern Carnarvon Basin. Seismic sections from the Exmouth Sub-basin and outer Exmouth Plateau demonstrate significant growth strata associated with displacement on normal faults starting at least at the base of the R. rhaetica zone (Rhaetian). This tectonic event coincides with a marked change in sequence architecture and a large landward shift (~300 km) of the paleo-shoreline to the vicinity of the Rankin and Alpha Arch trends. Rapid creation of accommodation in the inboard narrow rift basins (Exmouth, Barrow and Dampier sub-basins) is suggested to be the most likely cause of this major transgression. The preferential development of associated carbonate build-ups during the Rhaetian on the footwall side of active tilted fault blocks provides additional evidence for the onset of significant extensional faulting occurring during this time. An earlier more subtle initiation phase of rifting, however, is interpreted during the Norian, from around the middle part of the H. balmei biozone time, above which a change in stratigraphic architecture from aggrading to retrograding occurs. The observed structural and stratigraphic transitions can be related to typical phases of evolution described in many rift basins around the world. The work highlights the importance of integrating regional structural geology, sequence stratigraphy and depositional systems observations to provide robust constraints for basin evolutions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 2841
Author(s):  
Zsolt Nagy ◽  
Mátyás Krisztián Baracza ◽  
Norbert Péter Szabó

The overpressure formation in the Pannonian basin, Hungary, was investigated but has not been properly understood for the last 40 years because at least two different explanations were delineated. The first explanation considers the hydrocarbon generation as the main overpressure generation mechanism with some undercompaction contribution. On the contrary, another explanation assumes tectonic stress as the main trigger of abnormal pressure. The following research delivers a suitable workflow to understand which generation mechanisms were active in the study area and estimate the quantitative contribution of the mechanisms. The developed workflow relies on the basin modeling principles that were designed to simulate subsurface processes on a geological timeframe. Moreover, the uncertainty of input parameters was considered, and the joint application of a heuristic Monte Carlo simulation scheme and improved basin modeling resulted in stochastic pore pressure models. The most frequent value (MFV) method was applied on the simulated values to test a robust statistical method in pore pressure prediction. The study has identified not only the four main overpressure generation mechanisms, but it could calculate the individual contribution to the subsurface pressure. Finally, two independent and stochastic pore pressure prediction methods have been developed that could be used in the pre-drill well planning phase and the real-time prediction during drilling.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen O'Connor* ◽  
Ed Hoskin ◽  
Rick Lahann ◽  
Jack Lee ◽  
Christopher Ward ◽  
...  

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