Ghost Ranch Field, Nevada; new discovery from combined 3-D seismic and well log data
Ghost Ranch Field, Nevada; new discovery from combined 3-D seismic and well log data
AAPG Bulletin (September 1999) 83 (9): 1377-1391
- Basin and Range Province
- block structures
- drilling
- faults
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- infill drilling
- migration
- Nevada
- North America
- Nye County Nevada
- oil and gas fields
- oil wells
- petroleum
- petroleum exploration
- production
- Railroad Valley
- reservoir rocks
- resistivity
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- source rocks
- structural traps
- surveys
- systems
- three-dimensional models
- traps
- United States
- velocity
- well logs
- Eagle Springs Field
- Kate Spring Field
- Ghost Ranch Field
Ghost Ranch Field was discovered in 1996 on the basis of a 3-D (three-dimensional) seismic survey guided by analysis of log data from nearby existing wells. The 7 mi (super 2) (18 km (super 2) ) survey had the initial goal of identifying infill opportunities in Eagle Springs Field and led to the drilling of a series of new producers. Results from this activity, combined with log data from nearby Kate Spring Field, enabled the mapping of an oil-bearing Paleozoic slide-block mass between the two fields. A structural high with four-way closure, roughly 40-50 ac (16-20 ha) in size, was identified and successfully drilled to open Ghost Ranch Field. Ghost Ranch produces from fractured Devonian dolomites at depths of about 4350-4400 ft (1326-1342 m). The field has a strong water drive, an oil column of 100 ft (30 m), and estimated original oil in place (OOIP) of 2 million bbl. Production through January 1999 was 216.7 mbbl (11% OOIP) from three wells. Success at Ghost Ranch suggests that the updip margins of the productive slide-block mass define an excellent target for future exploration.