2/2-3
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General information
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Wellbore history
GeneralThe wildcat 2/2-3 was drilled on a domal structure, south of the Ula-Gyda fault zone. Main objective was Late Jurassic sandstone in the Vestland Group. Secondary target was Middle Jurassic and Late Triassic sandstones.According to the license agreement the well should be drilled into the Triassic, salt, or a maximum depth of 5000 m whatever came firstOperations and resultsThe well was spudded with the semi-submersible rig Treasure Saga on 4 February 1983 and drilled to TD at 4100 m, 170 m into the Triassic Smith Bank Formation. At 3286 m the string was lost after a wiper trip. The well had to be plugged back to 3053 m and sidetracked from this point. At 3420 m the string was again lost but was recovered. The well was drilled using water-based mud. The well was drilled with seawater and bentonite down to 655 m, with polymer/gypsum/"SST 202" mud from 655 m to 1910 m, with lignite/Drispac/gypsum mud from 1910 m to 3523 m, and with lignite/lignosulphonate mud from 3523 m to TD.The well penetrated 2998 m of Cenozoic sediments represented by the Nordland, Hordaland and Rogaland Groups. The sequence was mainly composed of argillaceous deposits. The Oligocene Sand Unit (Vade Formation) recognized in well 2/2-1 and 2/2-2, was not established in this well. The Cretaceous sequence consisted of two lithostratgraphic units, the Chalk and Cromer Knoll Group. They were separated by an unconformity ranging from Santonian to Middle Albian. The Early Cretaceous and upper part of the Late Jurassic (Ryazanian-Middle Volgian) are highly condensed. The Late Jurassic predominantly consists of claystones of the Mandal (4m) and Farsund Formations. The Ula Formation is present from 3880 m in the bottom part of the Late Jurassic as a sandstone sequence of Early Kimmeridgian - Late Oxfordian age. The formation is resting unconformably on sediments of the Triassic Group.The Shetland Group chalk, 2965 m to 3494 m, has 112 meters of net porous limestone with an average porosity of 21 percent. The chalk is clean. Where the porosity is highest, 3050 m to 3090 m, the well has a large wash-out. The Ula Formation was a sandstone with 19 percent mean porosity (based on core and log analyses), but with a permeability not exceeding 1 mD in any net sand found. The cored sand was well cemented. The Triassic formation that was penetrated, 3930 m to 4100 m, had 15 meters of sand with a porosity of 16 percent. The sand was more shaly than the Jurassic sand. Fifty attempts were made to get formation pressures with the FMT-tool. Because of tight formation, only one measurement (4084.5 m in the Triassic sand with 10237 psi) can be assumed correct, and even this point was of questionable quality. All porous intervals in the well were water bearing. No shows were reported from this well. One core was cut from 3887.7 m to 3905.5 m in the Ula Formation sand. No fluid sample was acquired. The well was permanently abandoned as dry on 11 May 1983.TestingNo drill stem test was performed -
Cuttings at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate
Cuttings at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate Cuttings available for sampling?YESCuttings at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate Cutting sample, top depth [m]Cutting samples, bottom depth [m]220.004100.00 -
Cores at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate
Cores at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate Core sample numberCore sample - top depthCore sample - bottom depthCore sample depth - uom13887.73905.0[m ]Cores at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate Total core sample length [m]17.3Cores at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate Cores available for sampling?YES -
Core photos
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Palynological slides at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate
Palynological slides at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate Sample depthDepth unitSample typeLaboratory4035.5[m]SWCOD4079.0[m]SWCOD4088.0[m]SWCOD -
Lithostratigraphy
Lithostratigraphy Top depth [mMD RKB]Lithostrat. unit9215432827282728552906294729652965309034423494349434993523352335273880388039303930 -
Composite logs
Composite logs Document nameDocument formatDocument size [MB]pdf0.54 -
Documents – reported by the production licence (period for duty of secrecy expired)
Documents – reported by the production licence (period for duty of secrecy expired) Document nameDocument formatDocument size [MB]pdf20.97 -
Logs
Logs Log typeLog top depth [m]Log bottom depth [m]CDL CNL GR18823522CDL CNL GR SPECTRALOG35174099DIFL BHC GR214654DIFL BHC GR6401911DIFL BHC GR18503522DIFL BHC GR34854101DIPLOG35164101FMT35110FMT40840SWC21853013SWC35714088VSP1004085 -
Casing and leak–off tests
Casing and leak–off tests Casing typeCasing diam.
[inch]Casing depth
[m]Hole diam.
[inch]Hole depth
[m]LOT/FIT mud eqv.
[g/cm3]Formation test typeCONDUCTOR30214.036215.00.00LOTSURF.COND.20650.026655.01.39LOTINTERM.13 3/81897.017 1/21910.01.93LOTINTERM.9 5/83516.012 1/43523.02.14LOTOPEN HOLE4100.08 1/24100.00.00LOT -
Drilling mud
Drilling mud Depth MD [m]Mud weight [g/cm3]Visc. [mPa.s]Yield point [Pa]Mud typeDate measured4501.1050.0water9001.1151.0water11301.1651.0water13201.2360.0water16301.2725.0water19201.3649.0water20801.3659.0water24401.4450.0water26301.4752.0water27201.5652.0water28301.6257.0water33001.7050.0water34501.6445.0water40001.6851.0water41001.6651.0water -
Pressure plots
Pressure plots The pore pressure data is sourced from well logs if no other source is specified. In some wells where pore pressure logs do not exist, information from Drill stem tests and kicks have been used. The data has been reported to the NPD, and further processed and quality controlled by IHS Markit.Pressure plots Document nameDocument formatDocument size [MB]pdf0.22