Geological Overview of the Niobrara Chalk Natural Gas Play

Similar documents
Sequence Stratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous Niobrara Formation, A Bench, Wattenberg Field, Denver Julesburg Basin, Colorado*

New Reserves is An Old Field, The Niobrara Resource Play in the Wattenberg Field, Denver Basin, Colorado

The Niobrara Petroleum System, Rocky Mountain Region. Steve Sonnenberg & James Taylor Colorado School of Mines

Making Sediments: Biogenic Production, Carbonate Saturation and Sediment Distributions

NORTH AMERICAN ANALOGUES AND STRATEGIES FOR SUCCESS IN DEVELOPING SHALE GAS PLAYS IN EUROPE Unconventional Gas Shale in Poland: A Look at the Science

AAPG HEDBERG RESEARCH CONFERENCE

Marine Sediments EPSS15 Spring 2017 Lab 4

Thickness, Compositional and Textural Variability, and Genesis of El-Lajjun Oil Shale, Central Jordan

Dakota Sandstone. of the Moxa Arch and Surrounding Green River Basin

UNIT 4 SEDIMENTARY ROCKS

Search and Discovery Article #10532 (2013)** Posted October 21, Abstract

High-resolution Sequence Stratigraphy of the Glauconitic Sandstone, Upper Mannville C Pool, Cessford Field: a Record of Evolving Accommodation

Geology of the Gull Lake North ASP Flood, Upper Shaunavon Formation, Southwest Saskatchewan

Summary. Introduction. Observations and Interpretations

Evan K. Franseen, Dustin Stolz, Robert H. Goldstein, KICC, Department of Geology, University of Kansas

Sediment and sedimentary rocks Sediment

Wattenberg Field Area, A Near Miss & Lessons Learned After 35 Years of Development History. Stephen A. Sonnenberg Robert J. Weimer

EPS 50 Lab 4: Sedimentary Rocks

The Nature of Sedimentary Rocks

Announcements. First problem set due next Tuesday. Review for first exam next Thursday. Quiz on Booth (1994) after break today.

Engineering Geology ECIV 2204

Ocean Basins, Bathymetry and Sea Levels

14.2 Ocean Floor Features Mapping the Ocean Floor

Minerals and Rocks Chapter 20

A Regional Diagenetic and Petrophysical Model for the Montney Formation, Western Canada Sedimentary Basin*

Overview of Selected Shale Plays in New Mexico*

Maximising the use of publicly available data: porosity and permeability mapping of the Rotliegend Leman Sandstone, Southern North Sea

Sedimentología Ayudantía Lectura 1 Carbonate minerals

SCOPE 35 Scales and Global Change (1988)

Sedimentary rocks. Mechanical Weathering. Weathering. Chemical weathering. Rates of weathering. Fossil Fuel Resources. Two kinds of weathering

1/31/2013. Weathering Includes Physical, Chemical, Biological processes. Weathering Mechanisms. Wind abrasion forming Ventifacts

Quartz Cementation in Mudrocks: How Common Is It?

Where is all the water?

Chapter 3 Sedimentation of clay minerals

The Giant Continuous Oil Accumulation in the Bakken Petroleum System, Williston Basin

GEOL Lab 9 (Carbonate Sedimentary Rocks in Hand Sample and Thin Section)

UNIT 3 GEOLOGY VOCABULARY FLASHCARDS THESE KEY VOCABULARY WORDS AND PHRASES APPEAR ON THE UNIT 3 CBA

Carbonate Diagenesis. From soft sediment to hard rock M.Geo.136b: Beckenanalyse 2. Stephan Sarner Maximilian Schaidt Johannes Sucke

Chapter 4 Implications of paleoceanography and paleoclimate

Steve Cumella 1. Search and Discovery Article # (2009) Posted July 30, Abstract

Emily and Megan. Earth System Science. Elements of Earth by weight. Crust Elements, by weight. Minerals. Made of atoms Earth is mostly iron, by weight

Sedimentary Rocks. Weathering. Mechanical & Chemical Weathering. Sediments. Lithification. Deposition. Transport. Erosion.

17. CARBONATE SEDIMENTARY ROCKS FROM THE WESTERN PACIFIC: LEG 7, DEEP SEA DRILLING PROJECT

Relationships of the Ordovician. Appalachian Basin. June 21, 2011

OCN 201: Deep-Sea Sediments

Ocean Floor. Continental Margins. Divided into 3 major regions. Continental Margins. Ocean Basins. Mid-Ocean Ridges. Include:

Processes affecting continental shelves

Chapter 4 Marine Sediments

Lecture 18 Paleoceanography 2

Overview of Woodford Gas-Shale Play in Oklahoma, 2008 Update

Tim Carr - West Virginia University

FY 2013 Annual Technical Report for NCRDS State Cooperative Program

Faults. Strike-slip fault. Normal fault. Thrust fault

Chapter 15. The Late Paleozoic World

The Eocene Gir Formation of the Ghani and Ed Dib Fields, Eastern Libya - an example of "Virtual Core Study"

Oil & Gas. From exploration to distribution. Week 1 V05 Origin of hydrocarbon resources part 1. Jean-Pierre Deflandre

The North Dakota Bakken Play - Observations. Julie A. LeFever North Dakota Geological Survey

Foundations of Earth Science, 6e Lutgens, Tarbuck, & Tasa

Sedimentology & Stratigraphy. Thanks to Rob Viens for slides

Sedimentary Rocks. Origin, Properties and Identification. Physical Geology GEOL 100. Ray Rector - Instructor

Sedimentary Rocks. Origin, Properties and Identification. Geology Laboratory GEOL 101 Lab Ray Rector - Instructor

Osareni C. Ogiesoba 1. Search and Discovery Article #10601 (2014)** Posted May 31, 2014

Earth s Seafloors. Ocean Basins and Continental Margins. Introductory Oceanography Ray Rector - Instructor

Sequence Stratigraphy of a Black Shale: How to Do It, and Why It Matters

GEOLOGICAL LOG INTERPRETATION TUTORIAL

Soils, Hydrogeology, and Aquifer Properties. Philip B. Bedient 2006 Rice University

Depositional Model and Distribution of Marginal Marine Sands in the Chase Group, Hugoton Gas Field, Southwest Kansas and Oklahoma Panhandle

The Mesozoic. Wednesday, November 30, 11

Chapter 6 Pages of Earth s Past: Sedimentary Rocks

This paper was prepared for presentation at the Unconventional Resources Technology Conference held in Denver, Colorado, USA, August 2014.

North Dakota Geological Survey

Ocean Sediments OCN Nov 2016

Ocean Sediments. Key Concepts

Shallow marine facies. Outline 13: The Paleozoic World. Shallow marine and terrestrial facies

FORMATION EVALUATION OF SIRP FIELD USING WIRELINE LOGS IN WESTERN DEPOBELT OF NIGER DELTA

Chapter 6 Sedimentary and Metamorphic Rock

Sedimentary Rocks. Rocks made of bits & pieces of other rocks.

NC Earth Science Essential Standards

SEDIMENTARY PHOSPHORITES: GENESIS, FACIES AND OCCURRENCE. Peter Berger Samantha Dwyer Jessica Hellwig Eric Obrock Kristin Read

Lab 7: Sedimentary Structures

2003 GCSSEPM Foundation Ed Picou Fellowship Grant for Graduate Studies in the Earth Sciences Recipient

Sedimentary Rocks. Origin, Properties and Identification. Physical Geology GEOL 101 Lab Ray Rector - Instructor

2016 U.S. Geological Survey Assessment of Continuous Oil and Gas Resources in the Mancos Shale of the Piceance Basin

Occurs in Nature SOLID Inorganic (not from a plant or animal) Crystalline (forms crystals) Atoms / Molecules bond in a regular pattern

Mesaverde Tight Gas Sandstone Sourcing from Underlying Mancos-Niobrara Shales*

1. are most likely to study the images sent back from Mars. A. Astronomers B. Geologists C. Doctors D. Engineers

Lower Mississippian Sequence Stratigraphy and Depositional Dynamics: Insights from the Outcrops, Northwestern Arkansas and Southwestern Missouri

Marine Science and Oceanography

EPSS 15 Fall 2017 Introduction to Oceanography. Marine Sediments

Mesozoic Earth History

Surface Processes Focus on Mass Wasting (Chapter 10)

Chapter 10: Deformation and Mountain Building. Fig. 10.1

Rocks and the Rock Cycle. Banded Iron Formation

Sedimentiogical study for subsurface section of Abu Khasib

Sedimentary Geology. Strat and Sed, Ch. 1 1

What is a sedimentary rock?

1. Introduction 2. Ocean circulation a) Temperature, salinity, density b) Thermohaline circulation c) Wind-driven surface currents d) Circulation and

Marine Sediments Chapter Four Chapter Overview Marine Sediments Approaching the bottom (Alvin) Marine Sediments Classification of Marine Sediments

EROSION, DEPOSITION AND SEDIMENTARY ROCKS. Reading: Earth Science Tarbuck and Lutgens Chapter 5: pages Chapter 3: pages 52-54, 61-69

Transcription:

Geological Overview of the Niobrara Chalk Natural Gas Play W. Lynn Watney Kansas Geological Survey KU Energy Research Center The University of Kansas Lawrence, KS

Outline Geologic Setting Paleogeography Niobrara Distribution Stratigraphy Reservoir Characteristics of the Chalk Reservoirs Lithofacies Structure Gas Fields in NE Colorado and NW Kansas Summary

Late Cretaceous Paleogeography The Cretaceous Period 144-65 Ma

Geologic Setting in Late Cretaceous Continents began to move toward their present configuration. Atlantic Ocean widened. Gondwanaland breaks up Black shale and chalk deposits abound. Limited ice caps to supply cold (dense, heavy) oxygen-rich water to ocean bottoms - anoxia Volcanism + mountain building in western U.S. subduction. (Cordilleran region)

Upper Cretaceous Geologic Setting (continued) General Conditions High sea levels worldwide Continents covered by shallow seas, epicontinental seas including interior U.S. Chalk deposits represent 70% of the total carbonate sediment deposited worldwide for the past 100 m.a. (Hay et al., 1976) Large-scale sedimentary cycles reflecting synchronous transgressive/regressive pulses largely eustatic in origin (Pollastro and Scholle, 1986) Life in the Cretaceous Diversification of the planktonic foraminifera Coccolithophores became abundant Coccoliths (low-mag calcite shells) accumulated in large numbers on the sea floor including epicontinental sea forming CHALK The word Cretaceous means "chalk bearing"

Niobrara Chalk High porosity (40-50%) and low permeability (0.1-3 md) Initial porosities from 60-80%, compacting with burial from dewatering, grain reorientation, and grain breakage Permeabilities in excess of 0.5 md at shallow depths (~1000 ft, like northwestern Kansas); max reported range from 0.1 to 16 md (Lockridge and Scholle, 1978) Eastern Denver Basin and Kansas Biogenic gas from thermally immature, organic-rich chalk beds (Landon, Longman, and Leneau, 2001) Local accumulations of shallow gas controlled by local, faulted, low-relief domal structures, or noses Chalk is very brittle and even minor structures lead to natural fracturing and greatly enhanced reservoir porosity Faulting documented as horst and graben features with faulting not extending into adjoining formations Higher structure and higher gas saturations, typically ~50% and less - (Lockridge and Scholle, 1978) Reservoir pressures: Goodland at 900 ft with ~60 psi to 350 psi at 1500 ft at Beecher Island, Colorado Polastro and Scholle (1986)

Niobrara Chalk (continued) Chalk is fined grained micrite representing a mixture of calcareous, organic, and terrigenous components (70-80% carbonate) Dominant grain size from 0.2 to several micrometers (10-6 m) Carbonate: calcareous (low magnesium calcite) nannofossils (60-90%) including coccoliths (golden-brown algae), and lesser Foraminifera and calcispheres, plus macrofossils Local diagenetic reactions with organics and inorganics leading to authigenic minerals (pyrite and kaolinite) Clays dispersed and laminae consist of smectite and increasing interstratified illite-smectite (expanding, water reactive clays) Pure chalk-marl-clay gradation reflected on gamma ray log Organic matter averages 3.2% and is as high as 5.8% in the Smoky Hill Chalk Member of the Niobrara Chalk Fm. Natural gas has chemical and isotopic composition characteristic of biogenic gas BTU content of gas ranges from 965 to 1025. Polastro and Scholle (1986)

Niobrara Chalk (continued) Pay commonly defined by induction-neutron-density Rt in pay typically from 3 to 15 ohm-m Pay typically has higher neutron porosity and low density porosity reflecting presence of natural gas (excavation effect) Fracture stimulation necessary to make gas production from wells economically feasible Sand nitrogen foam, sand-carbon dioxide, and methanol-water treatment have been used effectively IP after stimulation range from 100 to 1,200 mcfpd with rapid decline to 50 to 300 mcf (3 to 10% per year) Variation in productivity represents combined effects of matrix and natural fracture permeability Polastro and Scholle (1986)

Structural Development of Shallow Niobrara Gas Play

Isopach of the Leonardian Series Thicks corresponding with location of Niobrara gas fields C.I. = 50 ft. Cross Section index line B-B Oldham (1997)

Structure map at top of Niobrara Chalk Compared to top of Chase Cherry Creek Niobrara Gas Area Contour Interval = 100 ft (same for both maps) Lockridge and Pollastro (1988)

Summary -- Niobrara Chalk High porosity (40-50%) and low permeability (0.1-3 md) Permeabilities in excess of 0.5 md at shallow depths Biogenic gas from thermally immature, organic-rich chalk beds Local accumulations of shallow gas Chalk is very brittle Faulting documented as horst and graben features associated with underlying dissolution of Permian evaporite beds Higher structure and higher gas saturations, typically around 50% and less Low reservoir pressures

Summary (continued) Chalk is fined grained micrite with nannofossils and coccoliths Dominant grain size from 0.2 to several micrometer (10-6 m) Mixed layer expansive, water reactive clays dispersed and laminae

Summary (continued) Pay commonly defined by induction-neutrondensity Rt in pay typically from 3 to 15 ohm-m higher neutron porosity and low density porosity reflecting presence of natural gas Low matrix density Fracture stimulation necessary to make gas production from wells economically feasible Cumulative well production in NW Kansas average between 100 to 150 MMCF