Reservoir Engineering - A Reservoir Study of the West Edmond Hunton Pool, Oklahoma (TP 2203, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Max Littlefield Gray L. L. Godbold A. C.
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
34
File Size:
1325 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1948

Abstract

The West Edmond pool of Central Oklahoma, a limestone reservoir, has an area in excess of 29,000 acres and as of Sept. 15, 1946, had produced 53 million barrels of oil from 731 wells at an average depth of 6900 ft. Water has encroached into the reservoir along the west side of the pool and although the area of water invasion is large the net volume of water influx is small, because encroachment has been primarily into a fracture system. The most significant part of this study concerns the character of the Hunton reservoir. Geological study of cores of the producing section was made to supplement core-analysis data. It was determined that approximately 90 pct of the pore volume was contained in intergranular or sand-like porosity and 10 pct in fractures (intermediate porosity). The porous limestone is divided into blocks by the fractures, although in the strongly dolomitic parts of the producing section, fractures are less well developed. The low-permeability intergranular porosity, largely subsidiary to the high-permeability fractures, will produce oil into the fractures by evolution of solution gas. The fractures in effect serve as drainage channels for production of oil from the inter-granular porosity. Because of such a large difference in permeabilities of the two com-ponents, a high degree of by-passing will occur, and, accordingly, the economics involved in undertaking full-scale high pressure gas injection operations have been seriously questioned. Introduction The West Edmond Hunton pool, which covers portions of Canadian, Logan, Oklahoma, and Kingfisher Counties in Central Oklahoma, is the largest reservoir producing oil from a limestone in the state. The total area of the pool comprises about 29,240 acres and development is considered to be essentially complete. In all, 731 producing wells have been completed in the Hunton reservoir at an average depth of approximately 6900 ft, and have yielded a cumulative oil production in excess of 53 million barrels as of Sept. 15, 1946. In addition to wells completed in the Hunton limestone, 21 wells have been completed in the Bartlesville sand at a depth of approximately 6500 ft, which have produced a total of 730,000 bbl of oil. One small producer has been completed in the Cleveland sand at a depth of 5700 ft. However, a study of only the Hunton limestone reservoir will be presented in this paper. The most significant phase of this study concerns the special type of geological core examination that was made in an effort to ascertain the type and degree of porosity in the rock in accordance with lithologic types. Results of this geological study showed the west Edmond pool to be of such a complex nature as to appreciably affect the behavior normally associated with homogeneous reservoirs. Recognition of this condition in the
Citation

APA: Max Littlefield Gray L. L. Godbold A. C.  (1948)  Reservoir Engineering - A Reservoir Study of the West Edmond Hunton Pool, Oklahoma (TP 2203, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion)

MLA: Max Littlefield Gray L. L. Godbold A. C. Reservoir Engineering - A Reservoir Study of the West Edmond Hunton Pool, Oklahoma (TP 2203, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1948.

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