A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.

Historically pore pressure evaluation in exploration areas was based on empirical relationships between drilling parameters, wireline logs and the mud weight. Examples include Eaton's Ratio and the Hottman & Johnson Methods, which were based on data from the Gulf of Mexico. These methods ar...

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Main Author: Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/1/4090_1609.pdf
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spelling ftunidurhamethes:oai:etheses.dur.ac.uk:4090 2023-05-15T16:41:31+02:00 A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments. Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik 2003 application/pdf http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/ http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/1/4090_1609.pdf unknown oai:etheses.dur.ac.uk:4090 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/1/4090_1609.pdf Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik (2003) A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments. Doctoral thesis, Durham University. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/ Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2003 ftunidurhamethes 2022-09-23T14:13:04Z Historically pore pressure evaluation in exploration areas was based on empirical relationships between drilling parameters, wireline logs and the mud weight. Examples include Eaton's Ratio and the Hottman & Johnson Methods, which were based on data from the Gulf of Mexico. These methods are not readily transported to other areas, such as the North Sea Basin, where the sediments are different in character and where burial and temperature histories are distinctly different. Data from several offshore North Sea wells, with high quality wireline and associated data have been analysed to determine the most appropriate method to estimate pore pressure in mudrocks. The data have led to an understanding of the key parameters for successful pore pressure estimation. The most effective method is shown to be the Equivalent Depth Method, but only where disequilibrium compaction is the source of the overpressure in the mudrocks. Core samples from 576 British Geological Survey sites in the offshore area of the British Islands were compared with > 10,000 porosities collected from the deep oceans (DSDP/ODP sites), which show that the porosities in the shallow section in the North Sea are anomalously low. The shallow section of the North Sea includes large volumes of Pleistocene-Recent sediments deposited as glacial and inter-glacial deposits. Frequency analysis (Cyclolog) of the wireline data covering this interval in several North Sea wells revealed a pattern in the relative featureless original data. Comparison with the global signature for oxygen isotopes for the same time period suggests that there have been ten cycles of ice sheet build up (Glacial period) followed by melting (Interglacial period) during the last one million years. Glacial deposits from 10 individual glacial cycles have therefore been identified in several exploration wells in the North Sea. Implications of loading/unloading of ice for the migration and trapping of hydrocarbons in the North Sea Basin are assessed. Thesis Ice Sheet Durham University: Durham e-Theses
institution Open Polar
collection Durham University: Durham e-Theses
op_collection_id ftunidurhamethes
language unknown
description Historically pore pressure evaluation in exploration areas was based on empirical relationships between drilling parameters, wireline logs and the mud weight. Examples include Eaton's Ratio and the Hottman & Johnson Methods, which were based on data from the Gulf of Mexico. These methods are not readily transported to other areas, such as the North Sea Basin, where the sediments are different in character and where burial and temperature histories are distinctly different. Data from several offshore North Sea wells, with high quality wireline and associated data have been analysed to determine the most appropriate method to estimate pore pressure in mudrocks. The data have led to an understanding of the key parameters for successful pore pressure estimation. The most effective method is shown to be the Equivalent Depth Method, but only where disequilibrium compaction is the source of the overpressure in the mudrocks. Core samples from 576 British Geological Survey sites in the offshore area of the British Islands were compared with > 10,000 porosities collected from the deep oceans (DSDP/ODP sites), which show that the porosities in the shallow section in the North Sea are anomalously low. The shallow section of the North Sea includes large volumes of Pleistocene-Recent sediments deposited as glacial and inter-glacial deposits. Frequency analysis (Cyclolog) of the wireline data covering this interval in several North Sea wells revealed a pattern in the relative featureless original data. Comparison with the global signature for oxygen isotopes for the same time period suggests that there have been ten cycles of ice sheet build up (Glacial period) followed by melting (Interglacial period) during the last one million years. Glacial deposits from 10 individual glacial cycles have therefore been identified in several exploration wells in the North Sea. Implications of loading/unloading of ice for the migration and trapping of hydrocarbons in the North Sea Basin are assessed.
format Thesis
author Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik
spellingShingle Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik
A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
author_facet Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik
author_sort Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik
title A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
title_short A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
title_full A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
title_fullStr A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
title_full_unstemmed A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
title_sort critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments.
publishDate 2003
url http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/1/4090_1609.pdf
genre Ice Sheet
genre_facet Ice Sheet
op_relation oai:etheses.dur.ac.uk:4090
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/1/4090_1609.pdf
Gyllenhammar, Carl Fredrik (2003) A critical review of currently available pore pressure methods and their input parameters: glaciations and compaction of north sea sediments. Doctoral thesis, Durham University.
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4090/
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