Abstract

AbstractCompared with the prolific success of the Triassic play in the East Irish Sea Basin (EISB) the lack of hydrocarbon discovery in neighbouring Permo-Triassic basins of the Irish Sea has been an enigma. However, recent exploration of the Peel, Solway and Central Irish Sea basins has provided new insights into the geology of these basins and the controls upon hydrocarbon prospectivity in the Irish Sea area. Regional seismic interpretation suggests that 12 of the 15 exploration wells drilled in the basins adjacent to the EISB tested valid structural closures at top Triassic reservoir level. Re-evaluation of the Irish Sea petroleum system reveals that, although effective reservoirs occur in the Lower-Middle Triassic Ormskirk Sandstone Formation, and evaporites in the Middle-Upper Triassic Mercia Mudstone Group provide a regional top seal, the major factor controlling hydrocarbon prospectivity is the limited presence of effective source rocks in the underlying Carboniferous section. A further control upon prospectivity is the timing of hydrocarbon migration, from those areas where Carboniferous source rocks were deposited and preserved. The Namurian basinal marine oil- and gas-prone shales, which form the principal source of hydrocarbons for the Triassic play in the EISB, are restricted to an east-west fairway extending from the EISB into the Kish Bank Basin. Rocks of this age are absent from the Peel and Solway basins as a result of Variscan uplift and erosion. However, palaeogeographical reconstructions based on well and outcrop data suggest that, even if preserved, the depositional environment was not conductive to the formation of marine oil-and gas-prone source rocks. Well and seismic data suggest that rocks of Namurian age were not deposited in the Central Irish Sea area, which remained high during much of Dinantian and Namurian time. Potential source rock development in the Central Irish Sea area is therefore limited to the Westphalian section, which is organically lean and dominated by intertinitic kerogens. Potential hydrocarbon traps in the Central Irish Sea, Peel and Solway basins formed largely as a result of Early Cretaceous tectonism and were subsequently modified by fault reactivation during Tertiary uplift phases. Trap formation appears to postdate the most likely timing of hydrocarbon charge, which this study suggests would have occurred in Late Triassic and Jurassic time. Hydrocarbon entrapment in the EISB may have been favoured by limited Early Cretaceous uplift, coupled with renewed hydrocarbon generation and re-migration during Early Tertiary time. It is concluded that the remaining prospectivity of the Triassic play in the Irish Sea area is likely to be restricted to the proven play fairway within the EISB.

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