Filling History of the Kuparuk Field Reservoir, Alaskan North Slope: Results of an Integrated Petroleum Systems Approach
By
L. Dzou and A. Pepper (BP Upstream Technology Group)
Kuparuk is a giant oilfield located on the
Colville-Prudhoe High, west of the Prudhoe Bay Field, in the Alaskan Arctic
plain. Bulk and molecular geochemical characteristics of the high molecular
weight fraction of the Kuparuk oils suggests derivation from a single source
rock: the Triassic Shublik Formation.We revisited the geochemistry of the
Kuparuk field within the context of a regional evaluation of North Slope
petroleum systems. We paid particular attention to the compositional filling
history, phase
behavior and interpretation of solution gas—rather than just the
oil—geochemistry. Integration of these additional data constrain the possible
interpretations of the oil geochemistry, as follows: (1) Kuparuk oil is
under-saturated by 200 psi at current reservoir conditions (2) charge GORs were
lower during the earlier charge history; (3) gas isotope data show that part of
the Kuparuk solution gas is lignin-derived. These interpretations are consistent
with the results of a proprietary light hydrocarbon classification scheme, which
in contrast to Thompson’s scheme places emphasis on source rock organofacies
than rather than maturity or
phase
segregation. Using Thompson’s (1987) light
hydrocarbon scheme in isolation, one would interpret Kuparuk as the residue from
repeated episodes of
phase
segregation and gas-cap leakage. Our integrated study
suggests a very simple charge / filling model, in which the Kuparuk reservoir
has remained single
phase
throughout. Lipid-derived oil and solution gas from
the Shublik, together with lignin-derived gas and naphthenic-aromatic condensate
from Kekiktuk coals shared a common migration path into Kuparuk.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.