ABSTRACT: Trap and Seal Analysis
in Carbonate Stratigraphic Trap Exploration - Lower
Miocene, Pearl River Mouth Basin, China
Anthony J Lomando, Peter J. Chimney, and John P. Popek , Chevron Overseas Petroleum Inc, San Ramon, CA 94583, phone: 925-842-3710, [email protected]
Carbonate shelf margin stratigraphic traps are a particularly
challenging play type because the same diagenetic factors responsible for secondary
reservoir quality enhancement can be responsible for degrading up-dip seal quality and
increasing trap risk. The Zhujiang Fm. prograded westward off the Dongsha Massif initially
as a ramp which evolved into a prograding and aggrading shelf margin. Seismic interval
velocity
analysis
, modeled with
data
from a nearby oil-bearing pinnacle reef, indicates a
thick porosity zone at the shelf margin, wedging and pinching out eastward. Core
data
from
the pinnacle reef indicated a short-term exposure event was responsible for significant
early secondary porosity enhancement. This also may have influenced the adjacent shelf
area; enhancing porosity in the shelf margin but reducing seal capacity in the equivalent
up-dip shelf sequence. The seal competency of the overlying Hanjiang shales was
demonstrated by hydrocarbons sealed in the adjacent pinnacle reef. Seal risk was evaluated
by mercury injection capillary pressure
analysis
in a shelf carbonate well updip from the
margin. It was determined that the up-dip shelf seal is sufficient to hold an economical
favorable 300-500 ft (90-150 m) hydrocarbon column.
Seismic evidence revealed several large mega-slumped portions of the shelf margin producing scalloped areas extending several kilometers back into the shelf. Subsequent filling of these reentrants could produce lateral sealing by juxtaposing Hanjiang shales against the sides of the remnant Zhujiang carbonate salient. The slump scar on the south side of the salient did not down-cut to a significant stratigraphic depth to provide a critical closure to trap a minimum hydrocarbon column to meet economic thresholds.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90913©2000 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Bali, Indonesia