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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 1998; v. 144; p. 189-203;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.1998.144.01.15
© 1998 Geological Society of London

Timing, Duration and Speed of Oil Migration

Unravelling complex filling histories by constraining the timing of events which modify oil fields after initial charge

M. Lisk1, P. J. Eadington1 & G. W. O’Brien2

1 CSIRO Division of Petroleum Resources and Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre, PO Box 1130, Technology Park, Bentley, WA6102, Australia
2 Australian Geological Survey Organisation — Petroleum and Marine Division, GPO Box 378, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia

Complex and multiphase charge histories are a feature of many hydrocarbon discoveries. Previous descriptions of charge history that have relied on the chemical properties of hydrocarbons do not define the geometry of hydrocarbon accumulations prior to the attainment of their present state. In this paper, examples of oil charge studies conducted on hydrocarbon discoveries from the Australian North West Shelf are presented to demonstrate the application of a new technique for the mapping of hydrocarbon charge called GOITM (Grains containing Oil-bearing fluid Inclusions). In Australian oil fields GOI values in oil leg samples are an order of magnitude higher than in underlying water zones and record the maximum oil saturation experienced through time. An empirical threshold for oil saturation consistent with accumulation (GOI > 5%) rather than migration (GOI < 1%) of oil has been established from a database of 20 Australian oil fields. Oil inclusions are retained if oil is lost from the pore spaces of the rock, which allows GOI to be used to identify relict oil columns and locate the original oil-water contact. GOI measurements allow the original size and disposition of palaeo-oil columns to be determined and the physical events controlling the composition and size of hydrocarbon accumulations to be deduced in space and time. These data allow issues which cause changes to the original fluid contacts, such as trap integrity, tilting and gas displacement, to be confidently identified and characterized. When combined with conventional approaches to prospect evaluation, these new data allow a more sophisticated description of the filling history of hydrocarbon discoveries. They also allow the oil charge risk associated with new plays to be appropriately constrained before new drilling is commissioned.