The New Albany Shale gas play in southern Indiana

dc.contributor.authorComer, J. B.
dc.contributor.authorHasenmueller, N. R.
dc.contributor.authorMastalerz, M. D.
dc.contributor.authorRupp, J. A.
dc.contributor.authorShaffer, N. R
dc.contributor.authorZuppann, C. W
dc.date.accessioned2007-02-02T21:32:59Z
dc.date.available2007-02-02T21:32:59Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.descriptionThis poster was presented at the 2006 Eastern Section American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 35th Annual Meeting, in Buffalo, N.Y., October 8-11, 2006.
dc.description.abstractThe New Albany Shale (Devonian and Mississippian) in Indiana is mostly brownish-black organic-rich shale with lesser greenish-gray shale. The formation is 100 to 140 feet thick in southeastern Indiana and dips and thickens to the southwest into the Illinois Basin, where it attains a thickness of more than 360 feet in Posey County. Gas production from New Albany Shale began in 1885 and drilling activity continued into the 1930s, when interest waned in favor of more lucrative opportunities elsewhere. Renewed activity, driven by higher gas prices, has been brisk since the mid-1990s, witnessed by the completion of more than 400 productive wells. The majority of these wells were drilled in Harrison County, where production typically occurs at depths from 500 to 1,100 feet and production rates generally range from 20 to 450 MCFGPD. In the past 2 years, Daviess County and surrounding areas have become the focus of New Albany exploration after the El Paso Production No. 2-10 Peterson horizontal discovery well was rumored to have tested 1.3 MMCFGPD at an approximate measured depth of 2,200 feet. New Albany production is mostly from the organic-rich Clegg Creek Member. Gas compositions (C1-C4 and CO2) and carbon and hydrogen isotopic signatures indicate that both purely thermogenic and mixed thermogenic and biogenic gases are produced from the New Albany. Produced water ranges from brine to water diluted through recharge by modern precipitation; the brine zones contain primarily thermogenic gas and the diluted water zones contain gas of mixed thermogenic and biogenic origin.
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dc.identifier.citationComer, J. B., Hasenmueller, N. R., Mastalerz, M. D., Rupp, J. A., Shaffer, N. R., and Zuppann, C. W., 2006, The New Albany Shale gas play in southern Indiana: Program with Abstracts, 2006 Eastern Section, American Association of Petroleum Geologists 35th Annual Meeting, October, 8-11, 2006, Buffalo, N.Y., p. 17.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/712
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.rightsThis work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 543 Howard Street, 5th Floor, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.
dc.subjectNew Albany Shale
dc.subjectIllinois Basin
dc.subjectIndiana
dc.subjectNatural gas production
dc.subjectDevonian
dc.subjectMississippian
dc.subjectBlack shale
dc.subjectSource rock
dc.subjectBiogenic gas
dc.subjectThermogenic gas
dc.subjectThermal maturity
dc.subjectVitrinite reflectance
dc.subjectGas fields
dc.subjectStratigraphy
dc.subjectCross section
dc.subjectStructure
dc.subjectThickness
dc.subjectMaps
dc.subjectCore
dc.subjectClegg Creek Member
dc.subjectCamp Run Member
dc.subjectSelmier Member
dc.subjectMorgan Trail Member
dc.subjectBlocher Member
dc.subjectFractures
dc.subjectHydrogen isotopes
dc.subjectCarbon isotopes
dc.subjectOrganic matter types
dc.subjectGas geochemistry
dc.subjectIndiana Geological Survey
dc.titleThe New Albany Shale gas play in southern Indiana
dc.typePresentation

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