By David Gardiner
The Faroe-Shetland Basin (FSB) is a prolific deep-water hydrocarbon province with world-class oil, gas and condensate discoveries within reservoirs ranging in age from Neoarchean fractured basement to Devonian, Carboniferous, Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous and Paleogene clastics, including the Clair Field with an estimated 10 x 109 barrels of in-place oil.
Several geological features of the FSB make this a relatively unique province within the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS), including:
Recent work by IGI in collaboration with Siccar Point Energy, Chemostrat, APT & The University of Aberdeen has created an updated geological and petroleum systems model which includes igneous intrusions and basement composition, in order to investigate their effects on the timing and magnitude of petroleum generation from Kimmeridgian source rocks. The results suggest the geological characteristics of the basin may, once properly included in our 3-D model, bring the predicted timing of oil generation closer to the present day by up to 40 m.y.
The study is to be published in Geology in October 2019, with an open access early publication edition available online now:
References:
Mark, N., Schofield, N., Gardiner, D., Holt, L., Grove, C., Watson, D., Alexander, A., & Poore, H., 2018, Overthickening of sedimentary sequences by igneous intrusions. Journal of the Geological Society, v.176, p.46–60. https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2018-112