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This report describing the petroleum resources within a total petroleum system in Pakistan was prepared as part of the World Energy Assessment Project of the U.S. Geological Survey. For this project, the world was divided into 8 regions and 937 geologic provinces, which were then ranked according to the discovered oil and gas volumes within each (Klett and others, 1997). Of these, 76 ''priority'' provinces (exclusive of the United States and chosen for their high ranking) and 26 ''boutique'' provinces (exclusive of the United States and chosen for their anticipated petroleum richness or special regional economic importance) were selected for appraisal of oil and gas resources. The petroleum geology of these priority and boutique provinces is described in this series of reports. The purpose of the World Energy Project is to assess the quantities of oil, gas, and natural gas liquids that have the potential to be added to reserves within the next 30 years. These volumes either reside in undiscovered fields whose sizes exceed the stated minimum-field-size cutoff value for the assessment unit (variable, but must be at least 1 million barrels of oil equivalent) or occur as reserve growth of fields already discovered. The total petroleum system constitutes the basic geologic unit of the oil and gas assessment. The total petroleum system includes all genetically related petroleum that occurs in shows and accumulations (discovered and undiscovered) and that (1) has been generated by a pod or by closely related pods of mature source rock, and (2) exists within a limited, mappable geologic space, along with the other essential, mappable geologic elements (reservoir, seal, and overburden) that control the fundamental processes of generation, expulsion, migration, entrapment, and preservation of petroleum. The minimum petroleum system is that part of a total petroleum system encompassing discovered shows and accumulations along with the geologic space in which the various essential elements have been proved by these discoveries. An assessment unit is a mappable part of a total petroleum system in which discovered and undiscovered fields constitute a single, relatively homogenous population such that the chosen methodology of resource assessment based on estimation of the number and sizes of undiscovered fields is applicable. A total petroleum system may equate to a single assessment unit, or it may be subdivided into two or more assessment units if each unit is sufficiently homogeneous in terms of geology, exploration considerations, and risk to assess individually. A graphical depiction of the elements of a total petroleum system is provided in the form of an event chart that shows the times of (1) deposition of essential rock units, (2) trap formation, (3) generation, migration, and accumulation of hydrocarbons, and (4) preservation of hydrocarbons. A numeric code identifies each region, province, total petroleum system, and assessment unit; these codes are uniform throughout the project and will identify the same type of e...
This report describing the petroleum resources within a total petroleum system in Pakistan was prepared as part of the World Energy Assessment Project of the U.S. Geological Survey. For this project, the world was divided into 8 regions and 937 geologic provinces, which were then ranked according to the discovered oil and gas volumes within each (Klett and others, 1997). Of these, 76 ''priority'' provinces (exclusive of the United States and chosen for their high ranking) and 26 ''boutique'' provinces (exclusive of the United States and chosen for their anticipated petroleum richness or special regional economic importance) were selected for appraisal of oil and gas resources. The petroleum geology of these priority and boutique provinces is described in this series of reports. The purpose of the World Energy Project is to assess the quantities of oil, gas, and natural gas liquids that have the potential to be added to reserves within the next 30 years. These volumes either reside in undiscovered fields whose sizes exceed the stated minimum-field-size cutoff value for the assessment unit (variable, but must be at least 1 million barrels of oil equivalent) or occur as reserve growth of fields already discovered. The total petroleum system constitutes the basic geologic unit of the oil and gas assessment. The total petroleum system includes all genetically related petroleum that occurs in shows and accumulations (discovered and undiscovered) and that (1) has been generated by a pod or by closely related pods of mature source rock, and (2) exists within a limited, mappable geologic space, along with the other essential, mappable geologic elements (reservoir, seal, and overburden) that control the fundamental processes of generation, expulsion, migration, entrapment, and preservation of petroleum. The minimum petroleum system is that part of a total petroleum system encompassing discovered shows and accumulations along with the geologic space in which the various essential elements have been proved by these discoveries. An assessment unit is a mappable part of a total petroleum system in which discovered and undiscovered fields constitute a single, relatively homogenous population such that the chosen methodology of resource assessment based on estimation of the number and sizes of undiscovered fields is applicable. A total petroleum system may equate to a single assessment unit, or it may be subdivided into two or more assessment units if each unit is sufficiently homogeneous in terms of geology, exploration considerations, and risk to assess individually. A graphical depiction of the elements of a total petroleum system is provided in the form of an event chart that shows the times of (1) deposition of essential rock units, (2) trap formation, (3) generation, migration, and accumulation of hydrocarbons, and (4) preservation of hydrocarbons. A numeric code identifies each region, province, total petroleum system, and assessment unit; these codes are uniform throughout the project and will identify the same type of e...
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