4.7 Article

Fluid flow in the Keathley Canyon 151 Mini-Basin, northern Gulf of Mexico

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages 919-923

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2007.12.005

Keywords

Permeability; Fluid Flow; Overpressure; Gulf of Mexico; Keathley Canyon; Ocean drilling

Funding

  1. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory [DE-FC26-01NT41330]
  2. Rice University

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Laboratory experiments and drilling observations are used to estimate vertically upward fluid flow rates of approximately 4 mm/yr in Keathley Canyon, northern Gulf of Mexico. Based on uncertainty in pressure and permeability models, flow rates exceed 1.3 mm/yr but are less than 28 mm/yr. Consolidation experiments document that permeability decreases from 10(-15) m(2) at the seafloor to 10(-18) m(2) at 300 m below seafloor. I use these experimental data with logging-while-drilling data to constrain a permeability function for the basin. Sediment discharge from an open borehole filled with weighted mud is used to estimate a minimum overpressure gradient of 4.3 kPa m(-1) in the Keathley Canyon mini-basin. The overpressure gradient and permeability model are input into Darcy's law to estimate an average flow rate for the basin. These flow rates are consistent with estimates of compaction-driven flow from existing regional-scale models of flow in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Hydrate stability calculations for the basin predict a 25 m deepening of the base of hydrate stability due to overpressure. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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