1887
2nd Australasian Exploration Geoscience Conference: Data to Discovery
  • ISSN: 2202-0586
  • E-ISSN:

Abstract

Summary

The results presented in this paper draws on a regional pressure analysis of the offshore areas of the Browse Basin and the southern Vulcan Sub-Basin.

The presented study focuses on Late Permian to Recent stratigraphy and a new stratigraphic scheme consisting of 11 main sequences has been developed as part of the study.

Vp-Rho cross plot analysis conducted for wells in the study area, indicates that undercompaction (disequilibrium compaction) is the main overpressure generating mechanism present. Although no clear deviation from a normal compaction/disequilibrium compaction trend is evident in the analysed wells, densities can be very high at depth with densities up to 2.65 g/cm3 and above. This indicates that some cementation and possible clay mineral transformations have taken place in the deeper (and older) shales posing a challenge to conventional porosity/effective stress related pore pressure prediction.

For the purpose of this study, a model describing (shale) overpressures due to “primary” and “secondary” disequilibrium has been developed. The developed geological pressure model shows an overall good match with shale pressure predictions and/or forms the upper bound of the observed shale pressure/drilling data for the majority of the analysed wells across the study area. The model is particularly useful when planning to drill in areas with few offset wells for calibration and may also form a supplement to pore pressure predictions from seismic velocities away from well control and thereby significantly reduces the risk of encountering unexpected high pressures.

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/content/journals/10.1080/22020586.2019.12072925
2019-12-01
2026-01-20
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References

  1. Emery, A., 2016, Palaeopressure reconstruction to explain observed natural hydraulic fractures in the Cleveland Basin. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 77 (2016), 535-552.
  2. Heller, J., O’Connor, S., Emery, A., Hoskin, E., Lee, J. and Ward, C., 2015, The effect of unconformities and subsequent loading on pore pressure profiles. Proceedings, Indonesian Petroleum Association, Thirty-Ninth Annual Convention & Exhibition May 2015.
  3. Longley, I.M., Buessenschuett, C., Clydsdale, L., Cubitt, C. J., Davis, R.C., Johnson, M.K., Marshall, N.M., Murray, A.P., Somerville, R., Spry, T.B. and Thompson, N.B., 2002. The North West Shelf of Australia – A Woodside Perspective, in Keep, M. & Moss, S.J., (Eds), in The Sedimentary Basin of Western Australia 3: Proceedings of the Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia Symposium, Perth, WA, 2002, pp 27-88.
  4. Marshalle N.G and Lang S, 2013, A New Sequence Stratigraphic Framework for the North West Shelf, Australia. Proceeding of the 2013 Western Australia Basin Symposium, 1-31.
  5. Swarbrick, R.E., Osborne, M.J. and Yardley, G.S., 2002, Comparison of overpressure magnitude resulting from the main generating mechanisms, In: Huffman, A.R. and Bowers, G.L. (eds.), Pressure regimes in sedimentary basins and their prediction, AAPG Memoir 76, 1-12.
/content/journals/10.1080/22020586.2019.12072925
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): Browse; Geological Pressure Model; Vp-Rho cross plot
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