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General
Well 16/4-1 is located on the Utsira High. The primary objective of the well was to test the Paleocene Heimdal Formation. Secondary objectives were Jurassic and Triassic sandstones, Zechstein carbonates and Rotliegendes conglomerates. The well was planned to reach TD at 2850 m + 100 m after having identified a seismic reflector at this depth, interpreted to represent Top Metamorphic Basement.
Operations and results
Wildcat well 16/4-1 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Treasure Seeker on 8 September 1984 and drilled to TD at 2909 m in crystalline/metamorphic basement of Early Paleozoic age. Under the 30" casing shoe a 17 1/2" pilot hole was drilled. At 494 m in Pleistocene sand and shale, the well started to flow up the annulus from a small gas pocket. The well died out by itself but there were problems with lost circulation, so a cement plug was set from 494 - 415 m. The cement was drilled out to 480 m and the hole was underreamed to 26" before landing of the 20" casing. No other major problems occurred during drilling of this well. The well was drilled with seawater and bentonite down to 494 m, with KCl/polymer mud from 494 m to 2052 m, and with NaCl/polymer mud from 2052 m to TD.
The well 16/4-1 encountered water-bearing
sandstones in the Paleocene Heimdal Formation as well as in the Triassic. The
latter is a 36 m thick sand in between the Smith Bank Formation and the
Zechstein Group. The Heimdal Formation Sandstones occur as interbedded
sand/claystone in the upper part (2100 m to 2142 m) and as a massive sandstone,
which is homogenous and very clean in the lower part (2142 m 2277 m). The
Triassic sandstones (2394 m to 2430 m) were very fine-to-fine grained with a
considerable amount of silt and mica. Log evaluations over these sands gave the
following results: The interval 2100 m to 2142 m gave a net/gross ratio of
0.095, with an average porosity of 23,06% and a shale volume of 43,58%
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00