| ArcGIS REST Services Directory | Login | Get Token |
| Home > services > Factmaps > FactMapsED50UTM32 (OGCFeatureServer) > collections > 254 > items | API Reference |
| JSON |
General
Exploration well 3/5-2 is located in the eastern part of the Søgne Basin. The main objective was to test the hydrocarbon potential of northeasterly dipping Jurassic sands, which appeared to be truncated up dip by erosion at a Late Kimmerian unconformity. The exact age of the beds above and below the unconformity could not be predicted with certainty with the seismic evidence available. There was no capable closure at any post unconformity horizon higher than that mapped as Late Kimmerian unconformity just above a possible Jurassic Sand.
Well 3/5-2 is Reference well for the Middle to Late Jurassic Haugesund Formation
Operations and results
Wildcat well 3/5-2 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Odin Drill on 29 June 1978 and drilled to TD at 3826 m in the Triassic Skagerrak Formation. The well was drilled without significant problems. After drilling 164 m of 36" hole the pipe was stuck, but after spotting two 60 Bbl LCM pills followed by an 85 Bbl pill of Pipe Lax the string pulled free without significant lost time. Drilling went on through the 26" section to 462 m using viscous gel mud. From 426 m to TD the well was drilled using a Drispac/Spersene mud system, adding Resinex from ca 3080 m.
Reservoir potential was encountered in
the Late Cretaceous Chalk (Maastrichtian 2708.5 m to 2726.5 m) and in Late
Jurassic (3174 m to 3185 m) and Triassic (3575 m to 3823.5 m) sandstones.
Geochemical analyses proved oil prone shale, marginally mature (%Ro = 0.6 û
0.7), in the Late Jurassic Kimmeridge Clay with TOC measured up to2.1 %. Also
the Middle Jurassic Haldager Formation contained shales with potential for gas
and possibly some oil. Vitrinite reflectance in one sample from this Formation
was %Ro = 0.85. Small quantities of C1 to C4 were recorded in the Late Jurassic
Kimmeridge Clay Formation (3143 m to 3163 m) and in even smaller amounts in
shales at the top of the Middle Jurassic (3331 m to 3359 m
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00