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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: The evolution of the petroleum systems in the Tampen Spur area, with main focus on the filling directions of the northern part of Snorre field, was addressed through 2D basin modelling (Petromod V. 4.5 and 7.0). The geochemical classification of the petroleum populations in the area represented the framework for considering the different kitchen areas and migration systems. Results from the basin modelling support, in general terms, the previous geochemical classification and petroleum families in the region. However, a separate well-defined main kitchen area for the Snorre Field was deduced opposed to the multiple kitchen areas having contributed to the filling as proposed in the literature. Our conclusions are based on the quantitative evaluation of the different proposed kitchen areas and the timing and extent of petroleum generation. Modelling of petroleum generation was performed using asphaltene kinetics determined on petroleum asphaltenes from Snorre oils. This approach was chosen in order to avoid problems associated with the kinetic variability encountered in the Draupne formation. The petroleum asphaltene kinetics was used to delineate the extent of the kitchen area, which reached the time/temperature conditions necessary for the generation of the analysed oil phase. The results thus differ from conventional oil window approximations as we utilize kinetic source rock parameters in the migrated oil for tracing out the generative basin. Three 2D lines crossing the main kitchen areas were modelled in this study. The models were calibrated to data from eight wells, consisting of measured vitrinite reflectance, corrected well temperatures and pore pressure. Three main kitchen areas were considered; one to the west and northwest of Snorre field, one directly to the north (More basin) and one to the east of the field (34/5 kitchen). Modelling suggests that the kitchen area to the west and northwest of Snorre is largely immature and that the volume of potentially generated petroleum is too small to fill the Snorre structure. In the northern kitchen area, the seismic indicated very thin upper Jurassic deposits, which reaches oil window maturities only at a relatively large distance from the structure. The modelling also demonstrated problems related to the filling of the Snorre structure from the More Basin. The combined effect of a thin source rock, which implies a regionally large drainage area to fill the structure, and the large distance to the mature kitchen, lead to the conclusion that the More Basin did not contribute significant volumes of petroleum to the Snorre field. In contrast, the kitchen area east of Snorre Field (the 34/5 kitchen) proved in the modelling to be mature and volumetrically large enough to account for the entire filling of the Snorre Field.
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