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General
Well 31/4-3 was drilled on the Bjørgvin Arch in the North Sea, east of the Oseberg main field. Near-by well 31/4-2 on the southern part of the Brage Horst had recently found live oil and gas in small quantities in the Brent Group. The primary objectives were sandstones within the Early Jurassic Dunlin and Statfjord Formation. They were thought to be separate reservoirs with different hydrocarbon/water contacts. A secondary objective was to penetrate a deep seismic marker assumed to be a Paleozoic unconformity. Accumulation of hydrocarbons in Early Triassic and pre-Triassic sandstones were considered possible if adequate seal and source rocks were present.
Operations and results
Wildcat well 31/4-3 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Treasure Seeker on 24 December 1979 and drilled to TD at 4981 m in rocks of Triassic/Permian age. The well was drilled with seawater and hi-vis sweeps down to 906 m, with XP-20/Spersene/Drispac mud from 906 m to TD.
Two separate hydrocarbon-bearing
sandstone intervals were encountered in the Late Jurassic Heather Formation. The
Oxfordian to Kimmeridgian "Intra Heather Sand I" from 2018 m to 2082
m had gas down to a gas/oil contact at ca 2035 m and oil down-to 2048 m. The
section below 2048 had silty to shaley sand with 82% water saturation. The OWC
could be somewhere in this section between 2048 and 2054 m. The Callovian "Intra
Heather Sand II" (Fensfjord Formation) from 2136 to 2246 m had oil (57.7%
average water saturation) down to a possible OWC at 2172. This section was a
silty/shaley sand and the net pay was 24 m. Below this the well penetrated 45 m
of Middle Jurassic Brent Group sandstones, a 291 m thick Dunlin Group with sandstone
in the Cook Formationa
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00