Back to Top
Skip to main content
NETL Logo

Preliminary Assessment of Hydrocarbon Gas Sources from the Mt. Elbert No. 1 Gas Hydrate Test Well, Milne Pt. Alaska

Preliminary Assessment of Hydrocarbon Gas Sources from the Mt. Elbert No. 1 Gas Hydrate Test Well, Milne Pt. Alaska Thomas D. Lorenson* U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd., MS/ 999 Menlo Park, CA, 94025, USA tlorenson@usgs.gov Timothy S. Collett U.S. Geological Survey, Denver Federal Center Box 25046, MS-939 Denver CO, 80225, USA Robert B. Hunter ASRC Energy Services, 3900 C St., Suite 702 Anchorage, Alaska, 99503 USA ABSTRACT Hydrocarbon gases were collected from well cuttings and core at the MtElbert-01 gas hydrate stratigraphic test well, drilled within the Milne Point field on the Alaska North Slope. Regionally, the Eileen gas hydrate deposits overlie the more deeply buried Prudhoe Bay, Milne Point, and Kuparuk River oil fields and are restricted to the up-dip portion of a series of nearshore deltaic sandstone reservoirs in the lower Tertiary (Eocene) Mikkelsen Tongue of the Canning Formation. The tested gas hydrates occur in two primary horizons; an upper zone, (ā€œDā€ Unit) containing 14 meters of gas hydrate-bearing sands and a lower zone (ā€œCā€ Unit), containing 16 meters of gas hydrate-bearing sands with log-interpreted gas hydrate saturations of 60 to 75 percent. The hydrocarbon gases from well cuttings from 604 to 914 meters are composed of methane with less than 1 ppm ethane. The isotopic composition of the methane ranges from -50.1 to -47.2 percent, decreasing with depth. Hydrocarbon gases collected by Modular Dynamics Testing (MDT) sampling in hydrate-bearing units C and D were similarly composed of mainly methane, with up to 270 ppm ethane. The isotopic composition of the methane ranged from -48.2 to -48.0 percent in the C sand and from