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ERTH 460 Syllabus

This 3 credit hour course, ERTH 460 and 460L, includes both a lecture and lab component on subsurface and petroleum geology. The lecture focuses on principles of subsurface mapping, reservoir analysis, fluid movement and entrapment. The lab emphasizes hands-on subsurface analysis using well logs, cuttings, and maps. Course objectives for both the lecture and lab involve understanding reservoir properties, structural traps, depositional environments, and applying this knowledge to hydrocarbon exploration and development. Topics covered include reservoir rocks, seals, structural geology, fractured reservoirs, sandstone and carbonate reservoirs, and petroleum generation and migration.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views3 pages

ERTH 460 Syllabus

This 3 credit hour course, ERTH 460 and 460L, includes both a lecture and lab component on subsurface and petroleum geology. The lecture focuses on principles of subsurface mapping, reservoir analysis, fluid movement and entrapment. The lab emphasizes hands-on subsurface analysis using well logs, cuttings, and maps. Course objectives for both the lecture and lab involve understanding reservoir properties, structural traps, depositional environments, and applying this knowledge to hydrocarbon exploration and development. Topics covered include reservoir rocks, seals, structural geology, fractured reservoirs, sandstone and carbonate reservoirs, and petroleum generation and migration.

Uploaded by

Jaysonn Kay
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Syllabus ERTH 460 and 460L.

doc

EARTH SCIENCE 460 and 460L (3 credit hours)


Subsurface and Petroleum Geology
Lecture and Lab
Spring Semester

Designation: Required for Petroleum Engineering majors

Course Description: Principles and techniques of subsurface geology with subsurface


mapping; facies and reservoir analysis; fluid-related rock properties; composition,
movement and entrapment of subsurface fluids (oil, natural gas, water), and
petroleum source rocks. Laboratory work emphasizes subsurface analysis of
reservoirs and mapping with logs, cuttings, cross sections and subsurface maps.
Applications to hydrocarbon exploration and development.

Prerequisites: ERTH 203 or 206 (The Earth’s Crust)

Materials:
Main Textbook: Petroleum Geology, F.K. North (1985)

Other readings: Elements of Petroleum Geology 2nd edition, Selley (1998)


Geology of Petroleum, 2nd edition, A.I. Levorsen (1967, reprinted 2001)
Applied Subsurface Geological Mapping, Tearpock and Bischke (1991)
Pore Geometry as Related to Carbonate Stratigraphic Traps, J.L. Stout
(1964, AAPG Bulletin)
Stratigraphic Traps in Sandstones – Exploration Techniques, Busch
(1974, AAPG Memoir 21)
Secondary Migration and Accumulation of Hydrocarbons,
W.A. England (1994, in AAPG Memoir 60)
Organic Geochemistry in Petroleum Exploration, C. Barker (1979,
AAPG Course Note Series No. 10)

Course notes handouts: Porosity in carbonate rocks


Hydrocarbon seals
Reservoir temperatures
Reservoir pressures
Coalbed methane
Shale gas

Software: Surfer 8 contouring package (provided in the computer lab)

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Syllabus ERTH 460 and 460L.doc

Course Objectives:
Lecture:
1. Understand composition, and physical and chemical properties of oil,
natural gas, and oilfield waters.
2. Understand composition and properties of sandstone, carbonate, and shale
reservoirs, including capillary pressure properties.
3. Understand composition, lithologic properties, and capillary pressure
properties of hydrocarbon seals.
4. Apply basic concepts of structural geology to the formation of structural
traps. Analyze families of structural traps. Introduction to exploration and
development concepts and predictive models.
5. Apply basic geology of fracturing to fractured hydrocarbon reservoirs.
6. Apply depositional environment of sandstone and carbonate reservoirs to
reservoir geometry and orientation, rock properties, and basinal setting.
Introduction to exploration and development concepts and predictive
models.
7. Understand the relationships of reservoir temperatures and pressures to
reservoir geology.
8. Understand how oil and natural gas are generated and what basic geologic
criteria are needed to identify and assess oil and gas source rocks.
9. Apply knowledge of hydrocarbon reservoirs and seals to processes of oil
and gas migration.
10. Understand the fundamentals of coalbed methane formation and
occurrence.

Lab:
1. Map stratigraphy and structure in the subsurface using well data. Produce
contour maps by hand and with the computer.
2. Interpretive contouring of subsurface data utilizing geologic knowledge.
3. Develop an understanding of core suites of borehole logs in terms of rock
properties and composition and porosity and permeability.
4. Describe and analyze sandstone and carbonate reservoirs with both well
cuttings and borehole logs, emphasizing the mutually supportive roles of
rock description and logs.
5. Map and analyze a small oil or gas reservoir with logs, well
records/results, and basic rock descriptions.

Topics:

Lecture:
1. Subsurface fluids - oil, gas, & water
2. Reservoir rocks & seals; capillary pressure properties of reservoirs & seals
3. Overview of well-site engineering and drilling operations
4. Subsurface structure & structural traps

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Syllabus ERTH 460 and 460L.doc

5. Fractured reservoirs
6. Sandstone reservoirs – depositional setting, subsurface analysis, and traps
7. Carbonate reservoirs – depositional setting, subsurface analysis and traps
8. Unconformities – geometry, subsurface identification & barriers to fluid
flow
9. Temperatures & pressures in the subsurface
10. Reservoir mechanics and dynamics; natural production mechanisms
11. Petroleum origin and generation; deposition of source rocks
12. Petroleum maturation
13. Identification and properties of petroleum source rocks
14. Migration from source rock to trap
15. Coalbed methane
16. Shale gas

Lab:
1. Structure contouring by hand
2. Structure contouring with a computer
3. Interpretive stratigraphic contouring
4. Geophysical logs – an introduction; basic geologic analysis and
interpretation
5. Correlating geophysical logs
6. Analysis of a sandstone reservoir with logs and cuttings (2 week exercise)
7. Analysis of a carbonate reservoir with logs and cuttings (2 week exercise)
8. Subsurface mapping and analysis of an oil (or gas) reservoir (3 week
exercise)

Class/laboratory schedule:
Lecture meets two times a week for 1 1/4 hour each lecture
Lab meets one time a week for 2 ½ hours

Prepared by: Ronald F. Broadhead (instructor)


Date: January 11, 2011

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