Abstract

Abstract Oil seeps related to igneous rocks in the Neuquén Basin have been known since pre-Hispanic times (sixteenth century) and have been explored in the southern Mendoza province since the late nineteenth century. In the 1980s, YPF (Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales) began the exploration of igneous rocks as hydrocarbon reservoirs in the Río Grande Valley area. The possible productivity of these ‘unconventional’ reservoirs was recognized by studying outcrops and well data of sills and dykes emplaced in different formations of the fold and thrust belt of the northern Neuquén Basin. Mud-logging control and evaluations with drill stem tests (DST) were decisive to define these reservoirs as prospective. From petrographical reports on samples from outcrops and cores, six lithological types could be distinguished in the igneous units of this region. Recent works confirm that this volcanism belongs to two predominant cycles: from the late Oligocene to the Miocene (‘Molle’) and from the Middle to upper Miocene (‘Huincán’). Although in igneous reservoirs it is difficult to forecast the estimated ultimate recovery (EUR), sills that crosscut the source rocks of the Vaca Muerta and Agrio formations demonstrate surprisingly high production rates, although the number of wells for the complete development is always difficult to establish.

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