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Bulletin 2172–I

Geologic Controls on the Growth of Petroleum Reserves

Chapter I of Geologic, Engineering, and Assessment Studies of Reserve Growth

By Neil S. Fishman, Christine E. Turner, Fred Peterson, Thaddeus S. Dyman, and Troy Cook

Abstract

Thumbnail of and link to Bulletin PDF (3.1 MB)The geologic characteristics of selected siliciclastic (largely sandstone) and carbonate (limestone and dolomite) reservoirs in North America (largely the continental United States) were investigated to improve our understanding of the role of geology in the growth of petroleum reserves. Reservoirs studied were deposited in (1) eolian environments (Jurassic Norphlet Formation of the Gulf Coast and Pennsylvanian-Permian Minnelusa Formation of the Powder River Basin), (2) interconnected fluvial, deltaic, and shallow marine environments (Oligocene Frio Formation of the Gulf Coast and the Pennsylvanian Morrow Formation of the Anadarko and Denver Basins), (3) deeper marine environments (Mississippian Barnett Shale of the Fort Worth Basin and Devonian-Mississippian Bakken Formation of the Williston Basin), (4) marine carbonate environments (Ordovician Ellenburger Group of the Permian Basin and Jurassic Smackover Formation of the Gulf of Mexico Basin), (5) a submarine fan environment (Permian Spraberry Formation of the Midland Basin), and (6) a fluvial environment (Paleocene-Eocene Wasatch Formation of the Uinta-Piceance Basin).
      The connection between an oil reservoir’s production history and geology was also evaluated by studying production histories of wells in disparate reservoir categories and wells in a single formation containing two reservoir categories. This effort was undertaken to determine, in general, if different reservoir production heterogeneities could be quantified on the basis of gross geologic differences. It appears that reserve growth in existing fields is most predictable for those in which reservoir heterogeneity is low and thus production differs little between wells, probably owing to relatively homogeneous fluid flow. In fields in which reservoirs are highly heterogeneous, prediction of future growth from infill drilling is notably more difficult. In any case, success at linking heterogeneity to reserve growth depends on factors in addition to geology, such as engineering and technological advances and political or cultural or economic influences.

Version 1.0

Posted July 2008


Suggested citation:

Fishman, N.S., Turner, C.E., Peterson, Fred, Dyman, T.S., and Cook, Troy, 2008, Geologic controls on the growth of petroleum reserves: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 2172–I, 53 p.



Contents

Abstract

Introduction

Reservoir Categories

Eolian Reservoirs

Norphlet Formation

Minnelusa Formation

Interconnected Fluvial, Deltaic, and Shallow Marine Reservoirs

Frio Formation

Morrow Formation

Deeper Marine Shales

Barnett Shale

Bakken Formation

Marine Carbonate Reservoirs

Ellenburger Group

Smackover Formation

Submarine Fan Reservoir

Spraberry Formation

Fluvial Reservoir

Wasatch Formation

Quantitative Measures of Well Production Variability

Results and Discussion

Conclusions

Acknowledgments

References Cited

Appendix. Stratigraphy and Depositional History of Formations Studied



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