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General
Block 16/10 is located in a structurally complex area between the Viking Graben, the Central Graben, the Witch Ground Graben and the Ling Graben. Well 16/10-2 is the second well drilled in block 16/10 PL 101 operated by Norsk Agip; the first one 16/10-1 was drilled May-July 1986. The purpose of the well was to test the hydrocarbon potential of the "Delta" structure located in the west part of 16/10 block. This structure is a tilted fault block elongated north-south bounded to the west by a north-south trending normal fault, and dip-closing to the north, east and south. It was interpreted as the largest structure in block 16/10 in terms of possible oil reserves. The structure is not salt-induced and being one of the oldest in this area it was also considered prospective for possible early migration. The Upper Jurassic and the Lower Cretaceous shales constituted the seal rocks for the geological model. The main and the secondary targets were respectively the "Oxfordian Sandstones" (Upper Jurassic) and the Triassic sandstones of the Skagerrak Formation that had been found hydrocarbon bearing in the nearby blocks in wells 6/3-1, 15/12-5, 15/12-4, 15/12-8, 15/12-6 and 16/7-4.
Operations and results
Exploration well 16/10-2 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Byford Dolphin on 20 June 1991 and drilled to a total depth of 3150 m in the Triassic sandstones of the Skagerrak Formation. The well was drilled with seawater and gel down to 417 m, with Seawater and gypsum polymer from 417 m to 2798 m and with Bentonite/Anco Temp mud from 2798 m to TD.
The Quaternary/Tertiary sequence
constituted predominantly marine claystones of the Nordland, Hordaland and
Rogaland Groups. The Cretaceous sequence was mainly represented by limestones of
the Chalk Group and by the reddish claystones and calcareous marls of the
Cromer Knoll Group that overlay the Base Cretaceous Unconformity found at 2818
m. The Upper J
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00