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A carbonate reservoir model for Petersilie field in Ness County, Kansas: effective waterflooding in the Mississippian System

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dc.creator McCaw, Alyson Siobhan
dc.date 2015-04-07T14:23:46Z
dc.date 2015-04-07T14:23:46Z
dc.date 2015-04-07
dc.date 2015
dc.date May
dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-03T20:05:59Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-03T20:05:59Z
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18910
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/284099
dc.description Master of Science
dc.description Department of Geology
dc.description Matthew Totten
dc.description The Petersilie oil field in Ness County, Kansas produces out of the Mississippian System, a reservoir composed mainly of shallow water carbonates, at depths of around 4375 ft (1334 m). The lithology of the field ranges from limestone to dolomite, to interlaminated limestone-dolomite beds. Chert is commonly found throughout. Petersilie field lies to the west of the Central Kansas Uplift, and to the east of the Hugoton Embayment. The field saw much drilling activity in the 1960’s, when it reached a production peak of nearly 378,000 barrels of oil per year. Production declined swiftly after that until the late 1990’s, when waterflooding was successfully employed. In this study, a reservoir model was produced for the Mississippian as it occurs in Petersilie field using the Department of Energy’s EdBOAST reservoir modeling software, with the intent of providing a reference for future drilling activity in the Mississippian and determining reservoir characteristics that may have contributed to the effectiveness of waterflooding in this area. The reservoir model was checked by simulation with a companion reservoir simulator program, BOAST 98. Subsequent comparison of simulated and actual oil production curves demonstrates the reliability of well log and drill stem test data for the field and proves the reservoir model to be a good fit for the Mississippian in Petersilie. Production curve analysis of Petersilie indicates the field was an ideal candidate for waterflooding because it has a solution-gas drive mechanism. As the field approached depletion from primary recovery, oil saturations remained high. Petersilie also exhibits high porosity and good permeability. The BOAST software was found to be an effective and inexpensive means for understanding the Mississippian reservoir in central to south-central Kansas. It was determined that BOAST has potential for practical use by smaller independent oil companies targeting the Mississippian in Kansas.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en_US
dc.publisher Kansas State University
dc.subject Carbonate reservoir
dc.subject Mississippian system
dc.subject Reservoir model
dc.subject Reservoir simulation
dc.subject Waterflooding
dc.subject Water injection
dc.subject Geology (0372)
dc.subject Geophysical engineering (0467)
dc.subject Geophysics (0373)
dc.title A carbonate reservoir model for Petersilie field in Ness County, Kansas: effective waterflooding in the Mississippian System
dc.type Thesis


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