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The Drilling & Development of the Oil & Gas Fields in the Dnieper-Donetsk Basin
V. A. KRAYUSHKIN, T. I. TCHEBANENKO, V. P. KLOCHKO, Ye. S. DVORYANIN
Institute of Geological Sciences
O. Gonchara Street 55-B, 01054 Kiev, UKRAINE
J. F. KENNEY
Russian Academy of Sciences - Joint Institute of The Physics of the Earth, Moscow, RUSSIA
Gas Resources Corporation, 11811 North Parkway, Houston, TX 77060, U.S.A.
The modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins is by no means simply an academic proposition. After
its first enunciation by N. A. Kudryavtsev in 1951, the modern theory was extensively debated and exhaustively tested. Significantly,
the modern theory not only withstood all tests put to it, but also it settled many previously unresolved problems in petroleum science,
such as that of the intrinsic component of optical activity observed in natural petroleum, and also it has demonstrated new patterns in
petroleum, previously unrecognized, such as the paleonological and trace-element characteristics of reservoirs at different depths. Most
importantly, the modern Russian-Ukrainian theory of deep, abiotic petroleum origins has played a central role in the transformation of
Russia (then the U.S.S.R.) from being a “petroleum poor” entity in 1951 to the largest petroleum producing and exporting nation on
Earth.
In this article is described a project for exploration and production of petroleum in an area which had been previously condemned,
according to the perspectives and reasoning of the old “biological-origin” hypothesis: the northern flank of the Dnieper-Donets Basin.
This specific project has been chosen because it is a "pure" modern project: the geological area explored is one which had been
extensively studied in the past and had been previously condemned as possessing no potential for petroleum production; the exploration
techniques applied, from the initial work-up, through the well planning, to the production tests have been carried out in ways peculiar to
such for abiogenic hydrocarbons in crystalline environments; and the scientific tests upon the petroleum produced were specifically
designed to test the assumption that the oil and gas originated at great depth in the Earth.
The Dnieper-Donets Basin runs in a NW-SE direction between 30.6°E-40.5°E; its northern and southern borders are traced from
50.0°N-51.8°N and 47.8°N-50.0°N, respectively. For the first 45 year period of the geological study of the Northern Monoclinal Flank
of the Dnieper-Donets Basin, its sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous rock had been condemned as possessing no potential for
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petroleum production for reasons of the complete absence of any "source rock" (so-called) and the presence of active,
strongly-circulating artesian waters. Recently the area was reexamined according to the perspective of the modern theory of deep,
abiotic hydrocarbon origins.
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2.) Production from the Precambrian crystalline basement: In addition to these reservoirs in the sedimentary rock, above, the
exploration drilling has discovered five reservoirs in the Precambrian crystalline basement rock complex at depths ranging from several
meters to 200 meters below the top of the crystalline basement. From such traditionally unusual reservoir rock, oil and gas wells
produce from the following levels: 3135-3151 m; 3164-3172 m; 3167-3173 m; 3192-3196 m; 3200-3280 m; 3213-3235 m;
3240-3260 m; 3244-3272 m, 3432-3498 m; 3468-3480 m; 3501-3520 m; 3516-3529 m; 3521-3531 m; 3547-3550 m;
3552-3570 m; 3590-3612 m; 3610-3625 m; 3618-3687 m; 3636-3735 m; 3685-3695 m; 3735-3800 m; and 4020-4041 m.
The trapping strata for the reservoirs in the Carboniferous period sandstones are shallower shale formations, as is typical for
sedimentary reservoirs. The trapping strata for the reservoirs in the Precambrian crystalline basement are impervious, non-fractured,
essentially horizontal zones of crystalline rock which alternate with the fractured, uncompacted, bed-like zones of granite and
amphibolite. An example of the “stacking of the petroleum reservoirs is shown in Fig. 2 for the Yuliyevskoye oil and gas field.
Following the discovery of these petroleum reservoirs, a series of quite different scientific investigations have been carried out to
test the initial assumptions that the oil and gas have entered the reservoir formations from great depth. Those laboratory analyses are
described here briefly.
1.) Analysis and correlations of trace element abundances in oil: The oil produced from all reservoirs and depths have been analyzed
for correlations of their trace metallic elements. For example the ratios of Ni/V and of either Methane or Nitrogen have been measured.
The abundances of the trace metals show a clear correlation and have thereby established that the oil at all levels share a common, deep
source, characterized by diffusive separation, regardless of the age, type or circumstance of the particular reservoir rocks.
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2.) Paleontology analyses of the oil, - and its significance: The Paleontology analyses of the oil in the shallower Permian and Upper
and Lower Carboniferous sandstone formations have demonstrated the presence of spore-pollen and other microphytofossils of the
Devonian and Proterozoic ages, establishing thereby upward migration from the deeper formations, which migration is not necessarily
correlated to the age of either. The paleontology analyses of the oil from these wells has been performed by laboratories in Lvov, Minsk
and Moscow. The proterozoic microphytofossils examined included the following: Protoleiospheridium conglutinatum Tim.,
Zonoleiospheridium larum Med., Leiominuscula rugosa Naum., Margominuscula rugosa Medw., Protoarchaeosacculina stava. Naum.,
Leiopsophosphaera giganteus Schep., Asperatopsophosphaera magna Schep., Strictosphaeridium implexum Tim., Gloecapsomorpha
hebeja Tim., Turuchanica alara Rud., Pulvinomorpha angulata Tim. The observations from all laboratories have been that the proportion
of proterozoic microphytofossils is usually equal to 70%-75% of the total spore pollen abundance in oil from every formation and
reservoir, irrespective of the reservoir rock, its depth or its age.
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These results, taken either individually or together, confirm the scientific conclusions that the oil and natural gas found both in the
Precambrian crystalline basement and the sedimentary cover of the Northern Monoclinal Flank of the Dnieper-Donets Basin are of deep,
and abiotic, origin.
The exploration drilling is still in progress and continues to yield success. As of this date (September 2001), there are more than
50 commercial commercially oil and gas fields in the 100km×600km strip of the northern flank of the Dnieper-Donets Basin. One field
produces gas from Jurassic age sandstones; thirty-two produce oil or gas from middle-lower Carboniferous age sandstones; fifteen
produce from both Carboniferous age sandstones and lower crystalline basement rocks (amphibolites, crystalline schists, granites,
gneisses, granodiorites); two fields produce oil and gas solely from the crystalline basement.
For the work here reported, the first four authors, who were principally responsible for the discovery of these fields, were
awarded the State Prize of Ukraine in the field of Science and Technology in 1993.
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