An exhumed palaeo-hydrocarbon migration fairway in a faulted carrier system, Entrada Sandstone of SE Utah, USA.



Garden, R.1,2, Guscott, S.C.3,4, Burley, S.D.2 & 5, Foxford, A.6 & 7, Walsh, J.J. 6 & Marshall, J.8
1 - Reservoir Description Research Group, Department of Petroleum Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, U.K.
2 - Present address: BG Group plc. Reading, U.K.
3 - Diagenesis Research Group, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Manchester, M13 9PL
4 - Present address: Department of Petroleum Engineering, Amerada Hess Ltd., Aberdeen AB12 3LE
5 - Basin Dynamics Research Group, Dept. of Earth Sciences, University of Keele, ST5 5BG
6 - Fault Analysis Group, Department of Geology, University College Dublin, Ireland
7 - Present address: Geoscience Ltd, Bickland Water Road, Falmouth, Cornwall, TR11 4SZ
8 - Department of Earth Sciences, University of Liverpool, L69 7GP

Abstract - The Moab Anticline, east-central Utah, is an exhumed hydrocarbon palaeo-reservoir which was supplied by hydrocarbons that migrated from the Moab Fault up-dip towards the crest of the structure beneath the regional seal of the Tidwell Mudstone. Iron oxide reduction in porous, high permeability aeolian sandstones records the secondary migration of hydrocarbons, filling of traps against small sealing faults and spill pathways through the Middle Jurassic Entrada Sandstone. Hydrocarbons entered the Entrada Sandstone carrier system from bends and other leak points on the Moab Fault producing discrete zones of reduction that extend for up to 400m from these leak points. They then migrated as focused stringers 2-5m in height to produce accumulations on the crest of the anticline. Normal faults on the anticline were transient permeability barriers to hydrocarbon migration producing a series of small compartmentalized accumulations. Exsolution of CO2 as local fault seals were breached resulted in calcite cementation on the up-dip side of faults.
Field observations on the distribution of iron reduction and calcite cements within the anticli8ne indicate that the advancing reduction fronts were affected neither by individual slip bands in damage zones around faults nor by small faults with sand:sand juxtapositions. Faults with larger throws produced either sand:mudstone juxtapositions or sand:sand contacts and fault zones with shale smear. Shale-smeared fault zones provided seals to the reducing fluid which filled the structural traps to spill points.


Geofluids 1, 195-213, 2001.