ANCIENT MICROBIAL GAS IN THE MILK RIVER FORMATION, ALBERTA AND SASKATCHEWAN: HOW HAS IT STAYED AROUND FOR SO LONG?
Mercury injection capillary pressure data from the Milk River Formation and the overlying Upper Cretaceous Pakowki Formation, which contains numerous, regionally extensive bentonitic claystones, reveal a strong lithologic control on pore apertures and calculated permeabilities. For fine-grained sandstone reservoirs in the Milk River, pore apertures range from 0.3 to 10 µm and permeabilities range from 0.3 to 121 mD. In contrast, pore apertures and calculated permeabilities in interbedded mudstones range from 0.02 to 0.17 µm and 0.002 to 0.4 mD, respectively. For the Pakowki, claystones have pore apertures from 0.01 to 0.07 µm and calculated permeabilities of 0.0017 to 0.017 mD. The small pore apertures and low permeabilites of Milk River mudstones, as well as claystones in the Pakowki, indicate that microbial gas in the Milk River was "sealed" by both the intraformational mudstones and the overlying claystones. It is therefore not surprising that gas has accumulated in the Milk River and has been preserved for millions of years in sufficient quantities for exploitation.