Burrowed matrix powering dual porosity systems – A case study from the Maastrichtian chalk of the Gullfaks Field, Norwegian North Sea
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Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Marine and Petroleum Geology 113 (2020), 1041158
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The contribution and research by JD were funded through a European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 792314 (ICON-SE). The research of FJR-T was funded by project CGL2015-66835-P (Secretaría de Estado de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion, Spain), Research Group RNM- 178 (Junta de Andalucía), and Scientific Excellence Unit UCE-2016-05Resumen
Chalk reservoirs are commonly modelled as dual-porosity systems, in which a very porous but low permeable
matrix is intersected by highly permeable vugs and fractures from which oil and gas can be produced. The
Gullfaks Field in the Norwegian North Sea contains such a reservoir, which is producing from Maastrichtian
chalk in addition to the conventional Triassic and Jurassic siliciclastic reservoirs. However, in comparison to the
prolific chalk fields in the southern North Sea (e.g. Ekofisk, Valhall), chalk reservoirs in the northern part (e.g.
Oseberg and Gullfaks fields) experience challenged production due to reservoir presence and quality related to
depositional facies and structural conditions. Analyses of cores from three wells in the Maastrichtian Shetland
Group of the Gullfaks Field reveal that this interval is completely bioturbated during several stages, e.g. mottling
with diffuse bioturbated texture in an early softground stage that became subsequently overprinted by more
discrete burrows with active and passive fill and different rock properties during the stiffground and firmground
stages of the ooze. A rich and moderately diverse trace-fossil assemblage consists of abundant Zoophycos,
common Chondrites, Taenidium, Thalassinoides and Virgaichnus, and rare Nereites, Planolites, Spirophyton and
Teichichnus. Ichnological features allow the differentiation of five recurrent ichnofabrics (Thalassinoides,
Zoophycos, Chondrites, Nereites and Zoophycos-Taenidium ichnofabrics) with variable influence on porosity and
permeability. The Thalassinoides ichnofabric in chalk has the highest impact on improving reservoir quality,
whereas Zoophycos and partly Chondrites ichnofabrics, in marly chalk and chalky marlstone respectively, contribute
to creating potential reservoir zones if burrow density is high enough. Thin-section analysis of the different
ichnofabrics illustrates the negative or positive effect of burrows on porosity distribution, whereas micro-
CT imaging reveals an intriguing system of partly open micro-burrows (e.g. Virgaichnus) within the matrix,
which serves as source for porosity. This burrow porosity provides a connection in the matrix that hosts open
vugs and fractures, thus improving oil production.