United Kingdom Oil and Gas Fields: 50th Anniversary Commemorative Volume
CONTAINS OPEN ACCESS

Geological Society Memoir 52 records the extraordinary journey of more than 50 years that has led to the development of some 458 oil and gas fields on the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS). It contains papers on almost 150 onshore and offshore fields in all of the UK's main petroliferous basins. These papers range from look-backs on some of the first-developed gas fields in the Southern North Sea, to papers on fields that have only just been brought into production or may still remain undeveloped, and includes two candidate CO2 sequestration projects.
These papers are intended to provide a consistent summary of the exploration, appraisal, development and production history of each field, leading to the current subsurface understanding which is described in greater detail. As such, the Memoir will be an enduring reference source for those exploring for, developing, producing hydrocarbons and sequestering CO2 on the UKCS in the coming decades. It encapsulates the petroleum industry's deep subsurface knowledge accrued over more than 50 years of exploration and production.
The Juliet Field, Block 47/14b, UK North Sea
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Published:October 30, 2020
Abstract
The abandoned Juliet gas field is a small, highly compartmentalized, accumulation situated south and east of the Amethyst Gas Field. It was discovered in 2008 by well 47/14b-10 and flowed first gas on 5 January 2014. The field consists of at least two culminations within a very low-relief east–west-orientated fault-bounded anticline. The reservoir comprises aeolian sandstones of the Permian, Rotliegend Group, Leman Sandstone Formation. Reservoir quality varies from good to moderate, with a high production rate achieved from horizontal wells.
Seismic time-to-depth conversion is affected by Quaternary seabed channels, chalk burial history and a rapid thickening in the Basalanhydrit...
- Atlantic Ocean
- basins
- clastic rocks
- England
- Europe
- Great Britain
- history
- hydrocarbons
- Leman Sandstone Formation
- Lincolnshire England
- Lower Permian
- marine environment
- North Atlantic
- North Sea
- offshore
- oil and gas fields
- oil wells
- organic compounds
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- Permian
- petroleum
- petroleum exploration
- production
- reservoir properties
- reservoir rocks
- sandstone
- sedimentary basins
- sedimentary rocks
- shelf environment
- traps
- United Kingdom
- Upper Permian
- Western Europe
- Zechstein
- Dowsing fault zone
- Rotliegend Group
- Juliet Field