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    Publication Date: 2001-01-01
    Description: The Kish Bank Basin lies in the western Irish Sea c. 20 km east of Dublin. It is one of a number of remnants of a larger Permo-Triassic basin system that may have extended across the whole of the Irish Sea. It has a geological history similar to that of the East Irish Sea Basin, initially developing by the reactivation of Caledonian faults that controlled subsequent deposition during Dinantian and Namurian time, with Westphalian deposition in a sag-basin that overstepped the adjacent basement highs. Variscan dextral transpression resulted in the formation of the Codling and Bray faults, and Permian to Jurassic extension formed a set of north-south-trending faults. Liassic outliers are preserved in the hanging walls of the basin margin faults. Early Cretaceous uplift was followed by chalk deposition. Tertiary movements reactivated older faults, isolating the Kish Bank Basin, and producing 9 km of dextral strike-slip along the Codling Fault Zone. The main reservoir in the hydrocarbon play is provided by the Sherwood Sandstone Group, as successfully exploited in the East Irish Sea. Three wells have been drilled to test this reservoir. These encountered high-quality Sherwood Sandstone reservoirs beneath the good potential seal of the Mercia Mudstone Group (which included thick halites). Source rock potential is from either the Westphalian Coal Measures, as penetrated in well 33/22-1, or from inferred Dinantian to Namurian basinal shales. There is good evidence of an active source system, with oil shows in wells 33/17-1 and 33/22-1, data from geochemical analysis of sea-bed cores, a Seepfinder' survey, sea-bed mounds and seismic evidence of shallow gas. The main risks of the play are the migration pathway and the timing of trap formation with respect to migration. Migration favours the eastern side of the basin, and many of the tilted fault blocks that formed during Permian to Jurassic time have been modified by Early Cretaceous inversion and by Tertiary strike-slip compression. All of the structures that have been drilled to date have been either formed or modified after the time of peak hydrocarbon generation and migration.
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