Structural constraints on Lower Carboniferous shale gas exploration in the Craven Basin, NW England
de Jonge-Anderson, Iain and Underhill, John R. (2020) Structural constraints on Lower Carboniferous shale gas exploration in the Craven Basin, NW England. Petroleum Geoscience, 26 (2). pp. 303-324. ISSN 2041-496X (https://doi.org/10.1144/petgeo2019-125)
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Abstract
Detailed interpretation of a 3D seismic data volume reveals the detrimental effect that post-depositional tectonic deformation has had on buried Lower Carboniferous (Dinantian–Namurian) shales and its consequences for shale gas exploration in the SW part (Fylde area) of the Craven Basin in NW England. The structural styles primarily result from Devono-Carboniferous (syn-sedimentary) extension, post-rift subsidence and Variscan inversion, a renewed phase of Permo-Triassic extension, and Cenozoic uplift and basin exhumation. In contrast to the shallow dips and bedding continuity that characterizes productive shale gas plays in other basins (e.g. in the USA and Argentina), our mapping shows that the area is affected by deformation that results in the Bowland Shale Formation targets being folded and dissected into fault-bound compartments defined by SW–NE striking (Lower Carboniferous and Variscan) reverse faults and SSW–NNE to N–S striking (Permo-Triassic) normal faults. The fault networks and the misalignment between the elongate compartments they contain and the present-day minimum horizontal stress orientation limit the length over which long lateral boreholes can remain in a productive horizon, placing an important constraint on optimal well positioning, reducing the size of the shale gas resource and affecting well productivity. Our subsurface mapping using this high-fidelity dataset provides an accurate picture of the Upper Palaeozoic structure and demonstrates that faulting is denser and more complex than apparent from geological mapping of the surface outcrop. That structural complexity has direct and significant consequences for: the location of well pads; the lateral continuity of target shale gas horizons; the evaluation of the risk of inducing seismicity on seismically resolvable (large displacement) fault planes prior to drilling; and the likelihood of faults with small throws (below seismic resolution) being present.
ORCID iDs
de Jonge-Anderson, Iain ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9438-8194 and Underhill, John R.;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 90942 Dates: DateEvent31 May 2020Published2 April 2020Published Online7 February 2020AcceptedSubjects: Science > Geology
Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > Physical geographyDepartment: Faculty of Engineering > Civil and Environmental Engineering Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 24 Oct 2024 11:26 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 14:29 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/90942