La Cira Infantas
La Cira Infantas
La Cira Infantas
Colombia
Middle Magdalena Basin
PARKE A. DICKEY
Consultant
Owasso, Oklahoma
FIELD CLASSIFICATION
BASIN: Middle Magdalena
BASIN TYPE: Backarc
RESERVOIR ROCK TYPE: Sandstone
RESERVOIR ENVIRONMENT
OF DEPOSITION: Fluvial Channels
TRAP DESCRIPTION: Downthrown anticline and dipping beds truncated against high-angle
reverse fault
RESERVOIR AGE: Oligocene
PETROLEUM TYPE: Oil
TRAP TYPE: Lenticular Sandstones over
Domal Structure
LOCATION
The La Cira-Infantas field is the first oil field to
be discovered in Colombia, South America, and was
the largest until the discovery of Cano Limon in the
Eastern Plains in 1984. It is in the Magdalena River
Valley, near the center of the country, at 704'N,
7347'W, about 279 mi (450 km) from the Caribbean
coast at Barranquilla and 155 mi (250 km) north of
Bogota, the capital of Colombia (Figure 1).
There are many smaller oil and gas fields in the
vicinity of La Cira-Infantas, notably Casabe, 12 mi
(20 km) west, and Provincia, 40 mi (65 km) north.
These fields produce similar oil from the same
geologic intervals but are not described in this paper.
At the latitude of La Cira-Infantas, the Andes
Mountains consist of three separate ranges, called
the Western Cordillera, the Central Cordillera, and
the Eastern Cordillera. The Magdalena Valley lies
between the Central and Eastern Cordilleras
(Figure 1).
The cumulative production of La Cira-Infantas to
December 1986 is 683 million barrels (MMBO).
La Cira and Infantas are two distinct fields with
separate closures although both are on the same
structure (Figure 2). The Infantas field was discov-
ered first. It is a reverse-faulted anticline with oil
on the downthrown (west) side of the fault. The La
Cira field is a sort of half-dome north and west of
Infantas, also on the west side of the same fault.
They have always been considered separate fields
although they are contiguous and produce from the
same formations.
HISTORY
Pre-Discovery
In April 1536 the Spanish explorer Gonzalo Jimenez
de Quesada left Santa Marta on the north coast of
Colombia and started up the Magdalena River
(Oviedo, 1959). In October they had progressed about
279 mi (450 km) and reached an Indian village called
Latora. Some of the force had poled their way
upstream in small boats (bergantins) and some, with
horses, followed the banks. These were covered with
thick vegetation, were sometimes swampy, and were
often broken by tributary streams from the
mountains.
They renamed the village Barrancas Bermejas
("vermilion banks") because of the red color of the
banks of the river. From here they sent out scouting
parties up the tributary rivers. They found an Indian
with a load of salt in one of these tributaries, the
Opon, and from that deduced that there must be
civilization up in the mountains to the east.
They also heard of an oil seep up the Colorado
River, near its confluence with the Oponcito. They
later reported to Oviedo, the historian, that
there is a spring of bitumen [betun] which is
a pool that boils and runs out of the ground,
and it is [located] entering into the forest at
the foot of the hills, and there is a large quantity
of thick liquid. And the Indians bring it to their
houses and anoint themselves with this
bitumen because they find it good to take away
323
200 km
^ v , - >>
PERU 7
Figure 1. Sedimentary basins of Colombia showing
location of La Cira-lnfantas field.
324
Figure 2. Structure map, top C zone lower Mugrosa
Formation, La Cira-lnfantas field. Contour interval, 100
and 200 ft (30 and 60 m). (After Taborda, 1965.)
325
tiredness and to strengthen the legs, and the
Christians use this black fluid, with the smell
of fish or worse, to tar (caulk) their boats.
The Spaniards named the place of the seep Infantas,
that is, "princesses," after the two young daughters
of the King of Spain. This reference to an oil seep
in the New World is 200 years earlier than the first
reference to an oil seep in New York State.
The De Mares Concession
In 1903 Jose Joaquin Bohorquez arrived in Barranca
Bermeja, which by that time had become a river port
(Santiago Reyes, 1986). Coffee was brought by mule
train from the cities in the mountains on a trail
through the jungle to the river, where it was loaded
on steamboats. Bohorquez started a small transpor-
tation company. Besides handling shipments of
coffee, he exploited the rubber and vegetable ivory
that were abundant in the tropical rain forest
covering the valley of the Magdalena. The climate
of the valley is hot and humid, with 150 in. of rainfall
yearly. Malaria was endemic, and until very recently
few people wanted to live there. Most Colombians
live in the cool and fertile valleys in the mountains.
Bohorquez took samples of the oil to Barranquilla
and Cartagena but found little interest. Roberto de
Mares saw the samples and came to Barranca to
investigate further. In an informal partnership with
Bohorquez, he proposed obtaining a concession to
exploit the oil. He was a friend of the President of
Colombia and was granted the concession in
November 1905. Apparently, Bohorquez was cut out
of the deal at some point, became impoverished, and
was granted a small pension by the government in
1939.
The area of the concession is about 1976 mi
2
(5120
km
2
) (Donoghue, 1951). The area was not known
exactly until about 1928 when it was surveyed
accurately by J. F. B. O'Sullivan of the Tropical Oil
Company.
The contract required work to be started in 18
months, but this requirement was extended several
times. In 1909 the Ministry of Public Works
pronounced the concession canceled. It was restored
in May 1915, with the requirement that work start
within 12 months. De Mares finally interested the
firm of Benedum and Trees of Pittsburgh, Pennsyl-
vania, who had been very successful wildcatters in
the United States and Mexico. According to Benedum,
De Mares happened to meet a geologist named John
Leonard who was taking a vacation to South America.
Leonard told Benedum about De Mares's concession.
He considered it an immense challenge, which it was.
The area was almost unpopulated, was forested, and
was plagued with malaria. Access was only by river
boat. The Magdalena had regular steamboat traffic,
but the Colorado was small and navigable only by
canoes. To bring equipment from the United States
would take months.
In October 1915, a geological party with John
Leonard and a Colombian engineer resident in the
United States named Luciano Restrepo arrived at
Infantas and started a clearing. They also started
to remove the logs and snags from the Rio Colorado.
In February 1916, a group consisting of Benedum
and Trees and others from Pittsburgh visited the
area. At the end of February, De Mares asked
approval of the government to transfer the concession
to Benedum and Trees. In May 1916, they organized
the Tropical Oil Company in Pittsburgh as a
Delaware corporation with initial capital of
$50,000,000.
The transfer of the concession was first denied
but the company continued work. (The concession
was not approved until 20 June 1919.) On 24 June
1916, ten days before the time to start work had
expired, the Chief of Police of Barranca and
representatives of De Mares, the government, and
the Tropical Oil Company certified that work had
begun. This ceremony was called the Acta de San
Vicente.
Discovery
Although the government had still not approved
the transfer of the concession to the Tropical, they
proceeded with the development. Three cable-tool
drilling rigs were found up the river, abandoned after
an earlier attempt to exploit an oil seep. They were
hauled to Barranca on the Magdalena and up the
Colorado to Infantas by canoe. Infantas No. 1 was
started 14 June 1916, 21 days before the expiration
of the reinstated contract. It was not completed until
11 November 1918 with an initial production of 2000
bbl per day (BOPD) at 1943 to 2280 ft (553 to 695
m) (Donoghue, 1951). The discovery well is usually
considered Infantas No. 2, which was spudded 12
December 1917, 1.2 mi (2 km) north of Infantas No.
1, and completed 29 April 1918, at 1531 to 1580 ft
(467 to 481 m), with an initial production of 800 to
1000 BOPD. A third well about 984 ft (300 m)
southwest of No. 2 was completed 19 December 1918
for 600 BOPD. Infantas No. 1 was located close to
the fault and the oil seep, and less than 1 km from
the southern limit of the field. Infantas No. 1 is the
origin for the kilometer square grid of Figure 2.
The three successful wells aroused much interest
in the oil possibilities of Colombia. In 1919, a new
petroleum law was passed. Its requirements seemed
onerous, but by the end of 1919 over 40 companies
had taken out concessions.
In 1919, Benedum and Trees offered the De Mares
concession to Standard Oil Co. (N.J.). A. V. Hoenig
was sent to investigate (Gibb and Knowlton, 1956).
He reported that the properties might be worth
$5,000,000. At the same time, Standard sent James
Flanagan on a confidential mission to review not only
the properties but also the geographical and political
problems. Flanagan had served the company in a
political capacity in Peru. Many of the directors felt
326
that Benedum would ask too much money, and the
project was difficult and risky. The president, Walter
Teagle, was an influential leader. He said, "There
are very few sure things in the oil business, especially
in the producing end, and the individual or corpo-
ration that does not take some chances never gets
very far." The concession was finally purchased by
International Petroleum Co. for 1,804,000 shares of
International stock, worth $33,000,000. International
Petroleum Co. had been organized a few years earlier
to take over the La Brea and Parinas Estate properties
in Peru from the London and Pacific Oil Co.
International Petroleum was a subsidiary of Stand-
ard's Canadian affiliate, Imperial Oil Ltd. There was
political hostility toward the United States in
Colombia because of its support of the secession of
Panama in 1903, so it was decided to make Tropical
Oil Company an affiliate of the Canadian subsidiary.
Many of the personnel sent to Colombia were
Canadians.
Development of the Field
The years 1920 to 1924 were spent in preparation.
A camp with bunk-houses, mess halls, and even a
hospital were constructed at Infantas. A truck road
was built from Barranca. Additional drilling rigs were
brought in, and drilling started in 1921. By 1924,
there were 17 producing wells. It was found that
rotary tools were faster and cheaper than cable tools.
By the end of 1926 when the pipeline was finished,
there were 171 producing wells.
It was evident by this time that the field would
extend northward from Infantas, so it was decided
to transfer the camp and shops to El Centro, 5 mi
(8 km) north of Infantas, and make it the center of
operations. A meter-gauge railroad was built from
Barranca Bermeja to El Centro and the truck road
was abandoned. A small refinery was built at
Barranca that went on stream in 1922.
Because of delays in getting equipment, partly
caused by World War I, the government postponed
the date at which the 30-year concession started to
run. It was finally fixed as 25 August 1921.
In 1919, the Andean National Corporation Ltd. was
formed as another affiliate of International Petroleum
Co. in order to build a pipeline to the coast. James
W. Flanagan was made manager, and he had
difficulties coping with the political problems.
Apparently he concealed the true ownership of the
company, representing it as Canadian, which, of
course, it partly was. The concession for the pipeline
was granted in September 1922. Flanagan stated that
it had been "the cleanest business of its kind that
has ever been accomplished in this country." Actual
construction of the line started in 1925 and the first
oil reached the terminal at Mamonal, near Cartagena,
on 10 June 1926.
The line was 10 in. (25.4 cm) in diameter and there
were ten pump stations. The capacity at first was
30,000 BOPD, which was later increased by looping
to 50,000 BOPD. The Andean line was replaced by
a new line in 1985.
During the years 1922 to 1926, dwellings, shops,
an electric generating plant, and other facilities were
built at El Centro. By the end of 1927, a sum of
$23,521,000 had been spent on the Colombian
enterprise, but in that year the net income was
$6,943,000.
Geological Mapping
During those years the whole concession was
mapped by surface geology. It was entirely covered
by tropical rain forest, inhabited by a few Indians.
There was a mule trail from San Vicente de Chucuri,
a town in the foothills of the Eastern Cordillera, east
of the concession, through the forest to Barranca,
and there were a few other small settlements on the
west flank of the mountains. Surface geology was
difficult because trails had to be cut. Outcrops were
only found in the rivers and small streams. Although
there were many dangerous animals, including
poisonous snakes, the principal hardship was caused
by swarms of insects, especially mosquitoes and sand
flies called jejenes (pronounced "hay-hens"). Fresh
food such as locally grown plantains, bananas, and
cassava (yucca) were hard to transport by mules in
the wet forest where it rained more than 150 in. per
year. Canned food was also difficult to obtain and
transport. The geologists and their Colombian
helpers lived mostly on dried (jerked) beef, rice, coffee,
and the hard cakes of brown sugar called panela.
The boundaries of the concession were surveyed
by J. F. B. O'Sullivan, a Canadian born in Ireland.
He measured a base line where the Sogamoso River
comes out of the mountains at the northeast corner
of the concession. He then proceeded to triangulate
southward, occupying stations (called banderas) on
the peaks of the foothills and in the adjacent forest
until he arrived at a settlement called Marsella, near
Landazuri at the foot of the mountains, where he
measured another base line. So accurate was his work
that the second base line agreed with the distance
carried from the first by triangulation within 10 cm.
In spite of the difficulties and hardships, the entire
surface of the concession had been mapped by 1930.
Many American and Canadian geologists were
involved. The most distinguished of these was O.
C. Wheeler, who came to Colombia in 1921. He
measured the section of Cretaceous in the gorge of
the Rio Sogamoso and established the type section
that is still in use. He became chief geologist in 1929
and in 1930 was transferred to Toronto where he
was in charge of exploration in Colombia and Peru.
He visited the area frequently. T. A. Link, later chief
geologist of Imperial Oil Ltd. of Toronto, mapped the
mountain front, which was the east boundary of the
concession. It was marked by a large, high-angle,
reverse fault, which brought up the Cretaceous along
the east side of the concession. Other pioneer
geologists were W. W. Waring and A. K. McGill.
327
These reconnaissance studies revealed a number
of anticlinal structures. La Cira was discovered by
Wheeler when he noted a fault in a railroad cut. South
of the Colorado River, sharp anticlines were found
and drilled. Mugrosa and Colorado produced light oil
but were considered noncommercial. San Luis is
another sharp anticlinal structure near the mountain
front east of Infantas. The area between Infantas
and the mountain front and north to the Sogamoso
River was mapped in detail in 1935 by Parke Dickey,
Oscar Haught, and Edward La Tour. Several gentle
structures in this area have since proved productive.
The years 1922 to 1930 were also spent employing
and training workmen. They had to be brought in
from the mountains and especially from the coastal
savannas. The coastal areas are cattle country, and
the cowboys were used to physical labor and the hot
climate. Very few could read or write, and they were
totally ignorant of anything mechanical. The story
is told of an American driller who got along well
with only three words of Spanish: No, otro lado! ("No,
the other side!").
The relations between the expatriates and the
Colombians were generally excellent. With few
exceptions, the Americans learned Spanish and
devoted themselves to teaching the Colombians.
Great mutual respect and affection developed. By
1932, all the drillers were Colombian, as well as the
truck drivers, pumpers, and other roustabouts. When
the concession reverted to the government oil
company in 1951, it was the pumpers and roustabouts
who kept the oil flowing while new Colombian
superintendents and engineers learned their jobs.
The pay was about twice the going rate for
unskilled labor in Colombia, so that jobs with the
Tropical were eagerly sought. There were occasional
labor troubles, including strikes, but these were the
result of outside agitators and organizers. In
government circles, it was always popular to
denounce the American "imperialists." Once, on the
floor of congress, a senator described conditions in
the oil fields as miserable and said that the workmen
were held in peonage. When the company represen-
tative in Bogota' invited the senator to visit the field
he replied that he knew his accusations were untrue,
but that he was not in politics for his health!
Medical Problems
The Standard Oil Co. (NJ.) organized a medical
department in 1919 (Gibb and Knowlton, 1956). Dr.
Alvin W. Schoenleber first went to Mexico and then
Colombia. His reports showed appalling sanitary
conditions, stating that all the people in Colombia
in the vicinity of the concession were sick. Malaria,
hookworm, and amoebic dysentery were endemic,
and many other tropical diseases were prevalent.
There were few doctors and no modern hospital
facilities in the entire country. After his arrival, steps
were taken to improve sanitation and to construct
first a temporary hospital and finally a base hospital
in El Centra. The wet tropical climate and the
crowding resulting from the boom activity made
sanitation measures difficult. In one month in 1921,
the malaria admission rate was 1300 per 1000
employees, and the amoebic dysentery rate was 750
per 1000. Sanitary measures and medical assistance
were sometimes impeded by the necessity to get on
with the drilling. Finally, as many as 15 doctors were
on the staff and a modern hospital was built in El
Centra. The achievements of the Tropical became
a model for Standard affiliates elsewhere in the
world. The incidence of malaria and other diseases
was drastically reduced, and health care became
generally recognized as important to industry. Still,
however, in 1937 when a road was built to the Lisama
wildcat north of El Centra, the malaria rate was 150%
of the number of workmen.
The Reversion of the De Mares
Concession to the Government
The reversion of the De Mares concession to the
Colombian government was a very noteworthy
historical event (Mendoza, 1987). It was characterized
by strict faithfulness to the terms of the contract
on the part of the government, and a wholehearted
willingness on the part of the company to turn over
a functioning operation with all possible help to keep
it functioning. It was marked also by evidence of
mutual respect and affection between the Americans,
Canadians, and Colombians.
The original contract between the government and
Roberto De Mares specified that the term of the
agreement was 30 years dating from the time
exploitation work started. This date was postponed
several times. In 1919, the International Petroleum
Co. took over the operation and started "large scale
exploitation." Accordingly, by an official resolution
of 13 June 1921, the government specified that the
start of operations was 25 August 1921.
However, the Chamber of Deputies in 1937 asserted
that the start of operations was 14 June 1916, when
the Acta de San Vicente was signed. The reversion
to the government therefore should take place on 14
June 1946. The Supreme Court finally decided that
the date of reversion was to be 25 August 1951.
Finally, at 12 P.M. midnight, 25 August 1951, the
ceremony of signing the reversion took place in the
big hall of the Club Internacional in El Centra.
Present were the Minister of Development; the
president of the Tropical Oil Co.; L. P. Maier,
President of International Petroleum Co. of Toronto;
and many other dignitaries of the local area, the
government, and the company. In his speech, L. P.
Maier praised the faithfulness with which both sides
had lived up to their agreements and stated that while
the equipment in the oil field was of great value to
the country, the greatest gift was the staff of
technical people and skilled workmen that the
company had trained. The Minister in his speech
pointed out that the country had obtained in a
328
congenial and orderly manner the nationalization
which in other countries had been premature and
politically acrimonious. Both hoped that it would be
an example to other countries. It is unfortunate that
it has not been.
In a continuing effort to get the Colombian oil
company off to a good start, the Tropical assigned
American and Canadian advisers to some of the new
department heads. This arrangement did not last
long, for there was a tendency for the Colombians
to give the responsibility to the foreign engineers.
It was, of course, assumed that the operation of
the company by the government would enrich the
treasury. Although no figures are available, this may
be doubted. The labor laws and the unions main-
tained the labor force larger than really necessary,
in spite of the field's declining production. At one
point, men who had no work to do were trucked in
the morning to a waiting zone where they spent the
day, and then trucked back in the afternoon (Roberto
Sarmiento, former government geologist, personal
communication, 1982). In 1959, there were 30
chemical engineers in the refinery when six would
have been enough (Frederick Wellington, refinery
manager, personal communication, 1959). The real
contribution to Colombia was, as Mr. Maier said, the
training of engineers and workmen to the point that
they could operate an oil field with little outside
assistance.
Operations Since the Reversion
Following the reversion, there was a steady decline
in production rate until 1960, when additional drilling
for water injection maintained steady production of
La Cira until 1975 (see decline curve, Figure 17).
Because many of the wells had been drilled in the
1920s and 1930s before the introduction of electric
logging, many oil sands had been shut off behind pipe.
Some of these sands were located by gamma-ray
logging and gun perforated. Others were opened by
the infill drilling associated with water injection. By
opening these untapped sands, Ecopetrol was able to
maintain the production in spite of the fact that the
field was fully drilled up.
Ecopetrol continued the development of the Galan
field, which was an extension of Shell's Casabe field,
discovered in 1941. Ecopetrol also resumed develop-
ment of the Colorado field, discovered by Tropical
in 1921, and Lisama, discovered by Tropical in 1937.
Additional small fields have been discovered since,
but while they are on the De Mares concession, they
are on different structures from Infantas and La Cira
and will not be considered in this paper.
DISCOVERY METHOD
The individuals and companies involved in the
discovery have been mentioned above under History.
They include Colombians Jose Joaquin Bohorquez and
Roberto De Mares, American geologist John Leonard,
and Pittsburgh wildcatter Mike Benedum.
John Leonard had been active in Mexico and had
received a percentage for assembling a group of leases
acquired by Benedum and Trees about 1911 (Owen,
1975). A search of the remaining files of Benedum
and Trees was made by Roger Smith of Pittsburgh
in March 1990, but no early reports were found.
There is no doubt that the primary discovery
method was to drill on the huge oil seep at Infantas.
Leonard had acquired the leases in Mexico on the
basis of nearby oil seeps. How much he knew about
the structure is not now known. The immediate
terrain is broken and there are good outcrops, mostly
in watercourses. The early geologists must have
recognized the anticline, but whether they knew it
was faulted and that the first wells were on the
downthrown side of the fault is not known.
0. C. Wheeler is reported to have noticed a fault
(and possibly an east dip) in a cut along the railroad
from Barranca to El Centro. He realized that this
might indicate another field west of Infantas, and
La Cira was discovered. Later drilling showed that
La Cira was a large dome on the west side of the
Infantas structure. The upthrown east flank of the
structure was drilled in several places but is nowhere
productive. The C zone of the field outcrops and
smells of oil. The Infantas structure plunges both
south and north. There are several other anticlinal
structures south of Infantas on the De Mares
concession. They were drilled in the 1920s but oil
shows were considered small and noncommercial.
STRUCTURE
Tectonic History
Pre-Cretaceous
During the Paleozoic and through the early
Mesozoic, there must have been a depositional basin
in northwestern South America. Outcrops of Devo-
nian and other Paleozoic rocks are found in the centers
of uplifts, sometimes metamorphosed and sometimes
not metamorphosed at all. In the Jurassic and Triassic
there is a series of red beds with extensive intrusions
of diabase, resembling the Newark series of the
eastern United States. Presumably this indicates a
pulling apart of continental plates.
Cretaceous
During most of the Cretaceous, there was a
miogeosyncline in eastern Colombia and a eugeosyn-
cline in western Colombia, separated by what is now
the Central Cordillera (Campbell, 1968) (Figure 3).
About this time a large chunk of Pacific crust started
to migrate northward and then eastward to become
the Caribbean plate (Burke, 1988), sliding along the
right lateral Romeral fault (Figure 3).
In eastern Colombia, sedimentation continued,
derived mainly from the Precambrian Roraima
quartzite and the metamorphics of the Guayana
329
Figure 3. Tectonic map of northwestern South America
showing great wedge of sediment driven northwestward
along Santa Marta and Oca faults. Note offset of
mountain ranges. (After Vasquez and Dickey, 1972.)
Figure 4. Facies map of middle Eocene showing
approximate location of a wide river valley where the
Eastern Cordillera is now located. (After Forero, 1974.)
shield to the east. In the south, much sand was
deposited; in central Colombia, mostly shale; and
north into the Maracaibo basin of Venezuela, mostly
limestone. During much of this time, there were
anoxic conditions with the deposition of huge
thicknesses of black, organic shale, and in the Upper
Cretaceous an especially organic shaly limestone
with cherts, the La Luna.
This geosyncline contains sediments so similar to
those in the Cretaceous geosyncline in Colorado, New
Mexico, and Alberta that it is easy to conclude that
it may have been continuous with them.
Tertiary
Sedimentation was continuous from the Creta-
ceous into the Paleocene, but in the Middle Magdalena
Valley, continental sediments start to appear,
characterized by coal beds. At the end of the Paleocene
(Danian), there was uplift, and the Cretaceous was
eroded over the Central Cordillera and locally along
the Eastern Cordillera (Forero, 1974). During the
Eocene, there was a broad valley where the Cordillera
now lies (Figure 4). It must have been occupied by
a large river, possibly the ancestral Orinoco. To the
south, in the vicinity of Bogota', the Eocene is largely
lacustrine. In the Middle Magdalena Valley, it is
entirely fluvial. River channels are embedded in
oxidized continental mudstones. Farther north, this
river deposited a thick succession of deltas in the
Maracaibo basin. During the rest of the Tertiary,
the Andean orogeny continued, reaching a climax in
the Miocene. The Magdalena Valley was filled with
as much as 30,000 ft (9000 m) of fluvial sediment.
This valley filling is still continuing as the rainy
season causes the muddy river to overflow its banks.
Regional Structure
During the Oligocene, the depression in the area
of the Eastern Cordillera continued, but deposition
was continental. Beginning in the Miocene and
continuing into the Pliocene, there were tremendous
movements in northern South America. There is still
much controversy about the direction and timing of
the motions (Burke, 1988). The Eastern Cordillera
was uplifted with thrust faults along both east and
west margins, but with a relatively horizontal and
undisturbed zone in the center of the uplift. A
triangular piece of crust (Figure 3) containing the
Santa Marta massif and the Maracaibo basin was
driven northwest something more than 60 mi (100
330
Figure 5. Cross section X-X' across the Middle
Magdalena Valley. Location shown on Figures 1 and
3. (After Morales et al., 1958.)
km). The Caribbean plate moved several hundred
kilometers eastward with respect to South America
along the Oca fault and its projections. The Santa
Marta fault sheared off the northern part of the
Middle Magdalena basin to form the Cesar basin
(Figure 3). What happened at the south end of the
Santa Marta fault is not clear. Apparently, it became
a series of northeast-trending faults, parallel to the
strike of the Eastern Cordillera (Case and Holcombe,
1980). The La Salina fault is the westernmost of these
offshoots. It is nearly vertical, with the east side
upthrown several thousand meters. It may well have
been formed by left lateral transcurrent movement,
but this is hard to prove. A series of lesser faults
forming north-plunging anticlines break away from
the La Salina fault at a low angle. The Infantas
anticline is one of these.
The Middle Magdalena Valley is a half-graben
(Figure 5). The east side is formed by the La Salina
and related faults which throw the Cretaceous against
Miocene. The west side is an onlap of younger Miocene
and Pliocene sediments on the metamorphic rocks of
the Central Cordillera.
Local Structure
The principal structural feature of the La Cira-
Infantas oil field is the Infantas anticline (Figure 6,
B-B'). Along the crest is a reverse fault with the east
side upthrown. The dip is about 60 to the east. The
throw is from 800 to 2000 ft (250 to 600 m). To the
south, the fault swings southwest and dies out. To
the north, it continues along the east side of the domal
La Cira structure and disappears when the associated
anticline plunges northward.
The La Cira structure is a gentle dome whose crest
is about 2.5 mi (4 km) west of the Infantas fault (Figure
6, A-A
1
). Both the La Cira and Infantas anticlines are
cut by cross faults at angles of 60 to 90 from the
axis. The throw of these faults is small, less than
200 ft (60 m); but the water-oil contact is usually
displaced across the faults so they are apparently
sealing.
There is an older structure under Infantas and
La Cira (Figure 7). During the early Andean orogeny
at the end of the Paleocene, the Cretaceous was
uplifted into two rather symmetrical anticlines. It
was eroded on the crest through the Cretaceous down
to the Giron formation (Figure 8).
The Infantas fault was formed during the late
Andean orogeny, probably during the Pliocene. All
the Tertiary formations, including the Real series,
are folded. The faulting occurred after the oil
accumulated. The producing formations are exposed
and eroded on the east flank of the anticline, but
they still smell of oil.
STRATIGRAPHY
Pre-Cretaceous
The oldest formation penetrated in La Cira-Infantas
is the Giron Formation (Figure 8). Its age is not
determined exactly but is very likely Jurassic-Triassic.
It is named for a town near Bucaramanga and is
exposed in the gorge of the Lebrija River west of that
city. It consists of gray, red, and green shales and
sandstones. It contains frequent sills and flows of
diabase or basalt. It is remarkably similar to the
Newark formation of the eastern United States.
Cretaceous
The type locality for the Cretaceous is the gorge
of the Sogamoso River at the northeast corner of the
De Mares concession. The section was mapped by
331
1000 ME TENS
rm
Ft
- 1000
' 2000
' 3000
- 4000
i CUPHCSA axouaum oc PETBOLCOS
Figure 6. Cross sections A-A' and B-B', La Cira and
Infantas fields. Locations shown on Figure 2. (After
Morales etal., 1958.)
0. C. Wheeler in the 1920s, but the first published
description was by Pilsbry and Olsson in 1935.
The lowermost formation believed to be Cretaceous
is exposed in the Lebrija gorge above the Giron, where
it was named the Tambor. It consists of red shales,
sandstones, and conglomerates. It was penetrated in
Infantas 1613.
The Rosa Blanca consists of massive dark gray
bituminous limestones at the outcrop, but in the wells
it also contains oolites. It is 900 ft (270 m) thick at
Infantas. This richly fossiliferous formation is
Hauterivian in age.
The Paja Formation consists of black organic shale,
in places limy or silty. It is 2050 ft (320 m) thick
at the outcrop but about 500 ft (150 m) thick at
Infantas. Its age is lower Aptian to Barremian.
The Tablazo Limestone is a bluish-gray, massive
limestone with marly beds at the outcrop where it
is 500 ft (150 m) thick. At Infantas it contains shaly
beds and is 800 ft (240 m) thick. Its age is upper
Aptian to Albian.
The Simiti Shale was named for its outcrop at
Cienaga Simiti on the west side of the Magdalena
River, north of the De Mares concession. It consists
of shale with occasional thin beds of limestone and
sandstone. It is about 2000 ft (610 m) thick at
Infantas. Its age is middle to lower Albian.
The Salto limestone is not recognized on the De
Mares concession.
The La Luna formation was named for a sequence
of argillaceous limestones near Maracaibo, Venezu-
ela. In the De Mares concession, Wheeler named three
formations: the Salada, which is limey shale; the
Pujamana, which is a richly organic shale containing
fish bones and scales; and the Galembo, which is
black shale and limestone with fish scales and bones
and several beds of chert. Oil shows are common.
These formations are now considered members of
the La Luna, which at Infantas is about 1700 ft (520
m) thick. Its age is Turonian to Santonian. It has
been frequently analyzed for its organic content,
which is often 10%. In the Maracaibo basin, it is
considered to be the principal source rock, although
there it is only 330 ft (100 m) thick. There is little
doubt that the La Luna is one of the principal source
rocks of the oil at La Cira-Infantas.
The uppermost Cretaceous unit is the Umir, which
consists of gray shales with frequent coal beds. Its
thickness is unknown but is about 6000 ft (1830 m)
at the outcrop east of the De Mares concession. It
332
Figure 7. Pre-Tertiary geologic map of LaCira-lnfantas
fields. (After Morales et al., 1958.)
has been eroded away on the La Cira-Infantas
structure. Fossil pollen from the Umir indicates that
it is Maastrichtian in age, at least in part.
Tertiary
The Lisama Formation is conformable and
gradational on the Umir. It consists of massive gray
and reddish-brown shales with frequent beds of fine
sand and occasional coals. Its age has been deter-
mined by pollen as Paleocene. Its maximum thickness
is 3600 ft (1100 m) at the outcrop, but at La Cira-
Infantas it has been removed by erosion at the mid-
Eocene unconformity.
The Lisama is overlain unconformably by the La
Paz formation. At its type locality of Cerro La Paz
at the northeast corner of the De Mares concession,
it consists of massive crossbedded arkosic sandstones
and conglomerates, separated by beds of gray shale.
It is here about 4000 ft (1220 m) thick. At La Cira,
it consists of gray to brown and mottled shales with
occasional fine sandstones about 600 ft (180 m) thick.
At the base of the La Paz at the Sogamoso gorge
and also at Galan in the subsurface, there is a hard
gray to pink shale, originally called the "Altered Shale"
but now called the Toro member. It occurs mainly
in the De Mares concession and reaches a maximum
thickness of 200 ft (60 m). It has been considered as
possibly a pyroclastic or a weathered zone at the
unconformity.
The Esmeraldas Formation at La Cira consists of
light gray to greenish shales with some sandstones.
It contains the D zone, which is unproductive,
probably because the sands do not make good
reservoirs. It is between 550 and 750 ft (170 and 230
m) thick. Its top is marked by a zone of small
gastropods called the Los Corros fossil horizon, which
are brackish water fossils of upper Eocene age.
The Mugrosa Formation consists of gray to
grayish-green sandstones, usually fine but sometimes
pebbly, with interbedded gray and green shales in
the lower part. This is the productive C zone. The
middle part consists of blue and brown massive
mottled shales with occasional thin interbeds of fine
sandstone, which is the lower B zone. The upper
third consists of gray fine- to coarse-grained
sandstones, sometimes pebbly. This is the productive
B zone. The thickness of the Mugrosa at La Cira
is 1600 ft (488 m).
The top of the Mugrosa Formation is marked by
the "Mugrosa fossil horizon," which consists of dark
gray shales about 10 ft (3 m) thick containing
gastropod shells and occasional fish bones and turtle
plates. Their age is Oligocene. The Mugrosa fossil
horizon is an extremely useful marker bed, coming
as it does in the middle of a thick section of
continental sediments, all very similar. It can be
followed in the outcrop all over the De Mares
concession because the snail shells are ferruginous
and weather out to the surface. The shell molds show
up in drill cuttings, and the horizon can be recognized
on electric logs.
The lower 500 ft (150 m) of the Colorado Formation
consists of fine-grained gray sandstones interbedded
with mottled shales. Above this lie 700 ft (210 m)
of gray, medium to coarse sandstones with yellowish-
brown claystones mottled with violet. This is the
productive A zone. Overlying this is 550 ft (168 m)
of gray and red mottled claystones with thin-bedded,
pebbly sandstones that are productive at Galan, west
of La Cira. Overlying this are 600 ft (180 m) of brightly
mottled shales and coarse sandstones. Overlying this
is 250 ft (76 m) of dull gray to black, well-bedded
carbonaceous shales that contain brackish water
fossils, the La Cira fossil horizon. At La Cira-
Infantas, the Mugrosa Formation is about 3000 ft
(915 m) thick. Its age from the fossils is upper
Oligocene to lower Miocene.
The Real Formation is exposed on the flanks of
the Infantas-La Cira anticline where it is about 1600
ft (490 m) thick. It is much thicker and sandier to
the southeast. It consists of sandstones with some
interbedded shales. Its age is probably Miocene but
may be partly Pliocene.
333
SERIES
STANDARD
NOMENCLATURE
THICKNESS
METERS
LITHOLDGY
GENERALIZED LITHOLOGIC
DESCRIPTION
PLEISTOCENE
MESA GROUP
50 - 575
PLIOCENE
River Gravels and Boulders.
Well-Bedded Sandstone Conglo-
merate, Agglomerate
Much Pyroclaslic Material.
MIOCENE
(?)
REAL GROUP
400-3600
Sondstone,Sandy Cloystone
and Conglomerates of Igne-
ous and Mefamorphic Rocks
Mostly Conglomerate
at bose
OLIGOCENE
(?)
< a.
a- 3
in o
= K
COLORADO
FORMATION
MUGROSA
FORMATION
A
ZONE
575-3200
B&C
ZONES
1
lLoCira Fossils
Alternoting Red Shale and
Coarse Conglomeratic Sands
tone
*Mugroso Fossils (Local)
Shale with thin Beds fine
Groined Sandstone
EOCENE
(?)
t 2
ESMERALDAS
FORMATION
1225-2300 **?"?
HosCorros Fossils (Locol)
ondstone withlnterbedded
c Siltitone and Shale
c
Occostonol Lignite Seams
LA PA2
FORMATION
Sondstone,Massive, Cross
Bedded, Conglomeratic.
Locol HardlltertdSholeTToroFm
PALEOCENE LISAMA FORMATION 950- 1225
iclnterbedded Shale Siltston*
c
and Sandstone Cool Seams.
OANIAN?
MAESTRICHTIAN
Siltstone
UMIR SHALE
+ 1000
CAMPANIAN
Shale,Gray,Soft,Fissile
C i ' i i
^^Scottored ConcretionoryBeds|
:
3
c
o f Ironstone. I
Cool Seams.
SANTONIAN "
CONIACIAN
< o
z
z> ^-
_i <
TURONIAN
GALEMBO
MEMBER
PUJAMANA
MEMBER
I B0- 35(
Predominantly Calcareous
Shot* with Limestone Interbody
Chert Beds and Limestone
Concretions
5 0 - 2 2 5
Blockjhin-Bedded, Calcoreaa
Shole Medium Soft
SALADA MEMBER
50 - 100
Mord.Black.Colcoreous Shole
Limestone Bods,Pyrite Con Crete,
CENOMANIAN
SALTO LIMESTONE 5 0 - 1 2 5
Hard, Argi Ho ceout Limestone
Shole Partings
2 5 0 - 6 5 0
Block,Thin- Bedded Shale
150- 325
Limestone and Marl
Abundantly Fossiliferous
125- 625
Block,Soft,Thinly
Laminated Shale
150- 425
Massive Limestone and Mori
Abundontly Fossiliferous
VALANGJNIANt
0 - 6 5 0
ei-'-'^J.
TAMBOR FORMATION
Dork Red Siltstone,Sondsto
ne and Conglomerate. Gray
At Top,With Forominifera.
6I R0N FORMATION
(UNDIFFERENTIATED]
Interbedded Red ond Brown
Siltstone, SholeandSandstone,
With Volconics.
Figure 8. Standard columnar section of Middle
Magdalena Valley. (After Taborda, 1965.)
334
The Mesa Formation consists of poorly consoli-
dated sandstones and conglomerates with some
igneous pebbles. The sands contain hornblende and
magnetite and were apparently derived from the
Central Cordillera. It is unconformable on the
Colorado. Its age is probably Pliocene to Pleistocene.
It is 800 ft (245 m) thick on the De Mares concession.
All of the Tertiary formations above the Lisama
are fluvial and completely oxidized. It has always
been hard for this author to imagine how thousands
of meters of shales could be deposited under oxidizing
conditions. Once while he was flying over the lower
Magdalena in the rainy season, the explanation
appeared. The whole area was under water from the
flood of the Magdalena River, except for the natural
levees. This area is in the tropical wet-dry climate
where there is a pronounced rainy season followed
by several months when it hardly rains at all. During
the flood of the river, a few millimeters of mud was
deposited over the entire valley. Then in the dry
season the water table may have dropped a meter
or more below the surface. The muds were oxidized.
Plants grew and penetrated the mud with their roots.
After burial, these roots provided a small zone of
reducing material that changed the color of the iron
oxides, causing the mottling. Huge thicknesses of
mottled clays are found in Venezuela and Colombia,
but very seldom in more temperate climates. It was
pointed out many years ago by P. D. Krynine that
mottled clays are typical of tropical climates.
The Tertiary sediments thin from east to west and
become finer and less pebbly in that direction. The
pebbles are mostly vein quartz and chert. This
suggests that they were derived from the Eastern
Cordillera, which consists mostly of Cretaceous
sediments. It must have been rising all through the
Tertiary, although the greatest orogenic paroxysms
did not occur until the upper Miocene.
TRAP
La Cira and Infantas together constitute a faulted
anticline, with oil production on the downthrown
(west) side (Figure 2). The fault forms the lateral seal
on the east side. There are asphalt seeps at several
places along the fault, so it has been believed that
the oil is leaking up along the fault plane, even though
it is obviously the seal. The seeps might be explained
by the exposure of the productive formations at the
surface. Even at a considerable distance east of the
fault, the B and A zone sands smell of oil.
The upper seals consist of the thick shales or rather
mottled mudstones that separate the A, B, and C
productive sands. The sand bodies themselves are
stream channels, so there is considerable lateral
sealing in the middle of the reservoirs. The western
limits of production are downdip oil-water contacts
(OWC) that step down northward. They are about
3000 ft (915 m) below sea level in the southern part
of Infantas and 3800 ft (1160 m) in the northern part
of La Cira. This indicates that there has been
northward tilting since the oil accumulated. The
productive A, B, and C zones are exposed at the
surface on the east side of the fault, so there is no
production on the east flank of the anticline.
The structure must have first formed during the
post-Paleocene-pre-Eocene orogeny. During the time
it was exposed, the Cretaceous was truncated (Figure
5). There is thus a great unconformity below the
lowest Eocene productive zone. It seems likely that
the oil migrated along this unconformity from source
areas to the east. How it ascended into the producing
zones that are separated by hundreds of meters of
shale is not clear at all. The oil must have entered
the structure before the faulting occurred, because
the producing formations exposed on the east flank
still smell of oil. It is possible that the structure was
buried under thousands of meters of Miocene
sediment and then uplifted and faulted in late
Miocene or Pliocene. This would account for the
peculiar character of the oil, described below.
Infantas
Infantas and La Cira are really two different fields
although they are on the same anticline and are
contiguous (Figure 2). Infantas was discovered first
where the structure was cut by the Colorado River.
The structure was plunging to the south, so that
there is no production south of the river. The
structure rises and widens northward so that at 5
mi (8 km) north of Infantas No. 1, it is 2 mi (3 km)
wide. The dip ranges from 10 to 17 to the west,
and there is about 1000 ft (305 m) of closure from
the fault to the OWC.
La Cira
The La Cira field was discovered several kilometers
farther northwest on what was believed to be a
separate structure. It was only several years later
that its development to the east showed that it was
contiguous with Infantas. La Cira is a gentle dome
on the west flank of the anticline. The crest of the
structure is at 12N 3W, where the field is about
4 mi (7 km) wide. There is a shallow saddle east
of the crest that separates it from Infa.itas. The field
is about 6 mi (10 km) long north and south. There
is about 1000 ft (305 m) of closure from the crest
to the western oil-water contact. The OWC on the
southwest is about -3400 ft (-1035 m) and on the
north tip about -3800 ft (-1160 m). The east closure
is the continuation of the Infantas fault to the north.
Reservoirs
In La Cira the A zone (Figure 8) of the Oligocene
Colorado Formation consists of about 1200 ft (365 m)
of interbedded sands and shales. The sands range from
very thin to 100 ft (30 m) thick. They are clearly fluvial
channels. The uppermost group, called the "58 Sands,"
335
SP Res.
Figure 9. Isopach of "58 Sands" in northwest portion
of La Cira field. Contour interval, 10 ft (3 m). Squares
are 1 km (0.6 mi on a side). (After Valderrama, 1984.)
Figure 10. Electric log of well La Cira 1793 showing
B and C zone sands. (Unquantified log to show relative
positions of lithologic units and characteristic log
signatures only.)
has been mapped by Valderrama (1984) (Figure 9).
There seem to be parallel sets of channels with a
northeast direction. The "58 Sands" are about 180
ft (55 m) thick.
Below them is the "116 Sands" group, which is
about 400 ft (120 m) thick. There are more than 20
individual sand bodies, which are the best producers
in the A zone. The lower sands are usually water-
bearing.
The A zone is not developed at Infantas.
The B zone (Figure 8) is about 1800 ft (550 m)
thick and is present in both Infantas and La Cira.
The best sands are in the lower part and were quite
prolific in north Infantas where they were named
the "13 Sands" after Well Infantas 13. The Mugrosa
fossil horizon is the top of the B zone and is about
500 ft (152 m) below the base of the water-bearing
A zone sands.
The C zone (Figure 8) is the most prolific in both
Infantas and La Cira. There is about 250 ft (76 m)
of shale between the lower B zone sands and the
top of the C zone (Figure 10), which consists of 400
to 500 ft (120 to 150 m) of section, about 50% sand.
There are 20 or more individual sand bodies that
come and go locally so they are difficult to correlate.
The sands are soft and tend to flow into the wells.
Sometimes this leaves a cavity, and the casing
collapses.
It was recognized early that the sands must be
river channels because of their restricted extent.
Before electric logging it was impossible to tell where
the individual pay sands were by examination of the
cuttings. Consequently, many sands were shut off
behind pipe.
Beginning in the late 1920s, efforts were made to
correlate using heavy minerals. These efforts were
not very satisfactory for detailed correlation, but
several zones were distinguished. In 1933, Parke
Dickey and Waldo Waring started electric logging
using house-wiring wire and equipment borrowed
from the electrical department. In 1935, a Blau-
Gemmer logging truck was borrowed from the sister
company, Humble Oil and Refining Co. In 1937, a
gamma-ray logging device was acquired that
identified the sands behind pipe. Later conventional
logs were run by Schlumberger.
Porosity is variable but quite high, averaging 25.9%
in the A zone, 27.2% in the B zone, and 27.9% in
the C zone. Granulometric analyses have shown
8.52% coarse, 37.17% medium, and 54.31% fine sand
and silt. Permeability varies up to 1500 md; it is
difficult to determine because the sands are often
unconsolidated.
Figure 11 shows two photomicrographs of a La
Cira C zone sandstone. Note the abundance of altered
feldspar, the poor sorting, and the extremely angular
grains. The large pores in the lower figure may be
secondary. Authigenic clays in the pores are
abundant and have caused extensive formation
damage.
336
Table 1. Oil gravities at La Cira-lnfantas.
Figure 11. Photomicrographs of a C zone sandstone,
2444 ft, La Cira 1880 well. Note poor sorting, extremely
angular grains, abundant altered feldspar, and, possibly,
secondary porosity. Scale bar, 1 mm. (Courtesy of
Ecopetrol.)
Character of the Oil and Gas
The API gravity of the oil ranges from 27.9 at
Infantas to 21.4 at La Cira as shown in Table 1.
The chemical composition of the oil is shown in
Tables 2 and 3. Figures 12 and 13 are gas chro-
matograms of La Cira and Infantas oils. The Infantas
oil is from Illich (1983). The La Cira oil was run
by David Wavrek at the University of Tulsa. The
proportions of individual compounds that the La Cira
sample showed, normalized to methylcyclohexane,
are shown in Table 4.
Source Rocks
The source of the La Cira-lnfantas oil is clearly
the underlying Cretaceous shales and limestones, as
suspected by Hedberg in 1931. Geochemical analyses
of their source potential have been made by Zumberge
(1984).
The La Luna Formation, at its outcrop about 62
mi (100 km) north of Infantas-La Cira, is 490 to 1970
Infantas La Cira
A zone
B zone
C zone
25.9
27.2
27.9
21.4
24.1
23.8
Table 2. Bulk compositional data for oils (from Illich, 1983).
Gravity, API
Depth, ft (m)
Total sulfur
Distillation data
Gasoline (%)
Kero-lube (%)
Residuum (%)
Elution Chromatography
Saturates (%)
Aromatics (%)
Others (%|
Arom/Sat
Infantas
26.9
914-1067
(279-325)
0.66%
18
58
24
56.4
23.2
20.3
0.41
La Cira
21.2
1067-1219
(325-372)
0.90
6
63
31
58.9
24.9
16.3
0.42
Table 3. Analyses of La Cira and Infantas oil by molecular
type.
Infantas (%) La Cira |%)
effraction
Ci
5
plus fraction
Asphaltenes
Paraffins
Aromatics
Polars
Noneluted fraction
17.9
82.1
3.7
56.4
23.2
8.3
8.3
6.5
93.5
2.0
58.9
24.9
8.5
5.8
ft (150-600 m) thick. The Pujamana and Salada
members are the richest. They consist of black
calcareous shales with some interbedded limestone
and chert. Foraminifera and other pelagic fossils
suggest that they were deposited in moderately deep
water with restricted circulation. Total organic
carbon averages 3.51% in the Pujamana and 4.51%
in the Salada. Cavities and fractures are often filled
with oil or asphalt. The kerogen is mainly amorphous
and the hydrogen-carbon and oxygen-carbon ratio
indicate that it is type II. Vitrinite reflectance, spore
coloration, and pyrolysis indicate that it is within
the principal zone of oil generation. There are
abundant C
2
y steranes relative to C
29
steranes, and
low quantities of C19 and C
2
o tricyclic diterpanes.
Hopane triterpanes derived from bacteria are present.
These indicate marine organic matter.
Migration and Degradation
The oils from La Cira and Infantas have a peculiar
chemical composition. They appear to have been
degraded and then reheated.
337
Figure 12. Gas chromatogram of La Cira oil. The
proportion of individual compounds (normalized to
methylcyclohexane) is shown in Table 4.
The oil appears to have been degraded because the
higher normal alkanes (CJO plus) and the isoprenoids
are almost missing. It has probably also been
subjected to water washing because benzene and
toluene, the most water-soluble of the hydrocarbons,
are also almost missing. Water-washing always
accompanies degradation.
On the other hand, the oils contain abundant light
hydrocarbons, and these are mostly normal rather
than branched. As a result, the API gravity is
abnormally high for a severely degraded oil. It seems
that after being degraded the oil was subjected to
high temperatures and light hydrocarbons were
formed by thermal cracking.
The sulfur content (0.9%) is low for a degraded
oil. The introduction of light hydrocarbons would
have caused precipitation of asphaltenes. Most of the
sulfur is in the asphaltenes, so their precipitation
would have reduced the sulfur content.
The geological history of the area explains how
the degradation and reheating might have occurred.
Figure 14 is a series of diagrammatic cross sections
showing the successive periods of sedimentation
broken by uplift and erosion.
Cretaceous (Figure 14-1). During the Cretaceous,
there was a broad shelf on which shale and limestone
were deposited. The west coast of South America
is today, and may have been during the Cretaceous,
a zone of upwelling and rich organic productivity.
It sometimes became anoxic, so that large amounts
of organic matter were preserved. West of the Middle
Magdalena, there are turbidite deposits, while to the
south and east, there are thick sandstones derived
from the Guayana shield to the east. The total
thickness of the Cretaceous is about 13,000 ft (4000
m). The highly organic La Luna formation in the
upper part of the Cretaceous is about 2300 ft (700 m)
thick.
Paleocene (Figure 14-2). During the Paleocene, the
depositional environment became more continental
and there are frequent coal beds. As much as 6600
ft (2000 m) may have been deposited. This may have
been enough to mature the underlying Cretaceous
source rocks and start migration.
Eocene uplift and erosion (Figure 14-3). At the end
of the Paleocene, there was extensive uplift and
erosion. In some localities, for example La Cira, the
Paleocene and Cretaceous were completely eroded
down to the basement Giron. The unconformity
surface became a permeable zone through which oil
could later migrate. Meteoric water may have
penetrated deeply into the outcropping strata.
Eocene (Figure 14-4). During the Eocene, there was
a great river valley located about where the Eastern
Cordillera now is (Forero, 1974; Figure 4). Several
thousand meters of fluvial sediments were deposited.
Although the Eocene at La Cira is mostly shale, there
are thick sandstones and conglomerates 30 mi (50
km) to the northeast at Cerro La Paz. During the
Eocene, the oil may have been expelled from the
Cretaceous and may have migrated along the
unconformity surface, becoming degraded as it went.
Oligocene-Miocene (Figure 14-5). During the
Oligocene and Miocene, the Magdalena Valley
subsided and was filled with an enormous thickness
of fluvial sediments derived from the slowly rising
Eastern Cordillera. As much as 30,000 ft (9000 m)
may have been deposited. These sediments lap
westward onto the metamorphic rocks of the Central
Cordillera. Probably additional oil was expelled from
the source rocks. Any oil reservoired in the Eocene
on the east side of the valley would have been
reheated. On the west side of the valley, it would
not have been reheated because the onlap of younger
Tertiary sediments on the Central Cordillera resulted
in a much thinner section.
Late Miocene-Pliocene (Figure 14-6). In the later
Miocene and Pliocene, the great Andean orogeny took
place. The Eastern Cordillera was uplifted, with
complex thrust faults on both east and west margins.
The Infantas and other anticlines in the center of
the valley were uplifted and eroded down to the
Eocene strata. Farther east, in the foothills, all the
Oligocene and Miocene were removed. As much as
20,000 ft (6000 m) of fluvial sediments of the
Oligocene and early Miocene were removed by
erosion.
The burial history of the Middle Magdalena Valley
is reconstructed in Lopatin diagrams (Waples, 1980).
Figure 15 is based on the stratigraphic section at
La Cira. Here the Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene
formations were removed by erosion. Consequently,
the La Luna source rock did not experience peak oil
generation and expulsion until late Miocene.
However, it is most unlikely that the oil moved
straight up from the source rock to the reservoir.
338
U. II X
z u *
.- o -
i a
N < 2
N _l
X Z X
UJ
Ti me
Figure 13. Gas chromatogram of Infantas oil. (From
Mich, 1982.)
Table 4. Chromatogram of La Cira oil, compounds
normalized to methylcyclohexane.
n-Butane
2 Methyl butane
n-Pentane
2 Methyl pentane
3 Methyl pentane
n-Hexane
Methylcyclopentane
Benzene
Cyclohexane
2 Methyl hexane
3 Methyl hexane
1 -c/s-3 Dimethyl cyclopentane
1 -trans-3 Dimethyl cyclopentane
1 -trans-2 Dimethyl cyclopentane
n-Heptane
Methylcyclohexane
Toluene
1.36
9.52
13.47
16.80
10.88
23.13
20.07
1.02
26.60
17.01
25.71
12.24
11.90
25.51
45.60
100.00
10.20
Farther east there was less erosion at the end of
the Paleocene, and the Eocene is much thicker (Figure
16). The Umir and Lisama formations are preserved,
and there is a great thickness of Eocene La Paz
sandstone. Oil generation and expulsion from the La
Luna may have started in the Eocene.
After migrating and becoming degraded, the oil was
trapped in fluvial sands of the Eocene. But the Eocene
reservoirs here reached the oil window in the late
Miocene, suggesting that the reservoired oil may have
been thermally cracked. The process of cracking
degraded oil in the reservoir may have required less
temperature and time than generation of oil in the
source rock. It seems certain that the oil was
generated from the source rock somewhere east of
La Cira-Infantas and migrated westward toward the
flank of the deeply subsided Magdalena Valley during
the early Tertiary.
Water
The edge water on the west flank of the field
showed very little encroachment; at most one or two
locations. There was some fingering but no noticeable
effect in enhancing production. The average water
cut for the whole field increased to 8.61% in 1934
and 39.38% in 1940. Since 1942 the water cut has
declined. This must indicate that the pressure in the
aquifer has been taken off so that it will no longer
advance.
A chemical laboratory was set up in 1927 to analyze
and identify the source of water produced with the
339
r
- 2 0 0 0
- 4 0 0 0
- 6 0 0 0
APROX
VERTICAL
SCALE
METERS
<
z
w
_1
<
o _
< <
5 >
UJ
Q
cr
O
o
<
z
< D
>- -I
< bid
O I
(3 W
1
CRETACEOUS
PALEOCENE
3
LOWER
EOCENE
OLIGOCENE
MIOCENE
PLIOCENE
RECENT
Source r ocks
deposi t ed
Source rocks
truncated
Figure 14. Series of diagrammatic cross sections of
eastern Colombia showing successive vertical motions
resulting in filling of basins with sediments. Vertical
motions can exceed 6 mi (10 km). Horizontal motions
are not shown but can exceed 60 mi (100 km).
oil. The differences in the chemical composition of
the water in the different sands made it possible to
ascertain from which sand the water was coming.
Sometimes a C zone well would go to water, but an
analysis showed it was coming from the A zone
through a leaky casing.
The waters in the La Cira A zone are quite variable.
They are low in total solids, low in calcium and
magnesium, but high in bicarbonate. This indicates
that they are partly meteoric in origin (Dickey, 1966).
This evidence of meteoric origin of the water may
explain why some of the La Cira oils are highly
degraded. The B zone waters are more concentrated
and contain more calcium and magnesium and much
less bicarbonate. They are thus mostly connate in
origin. The C zone waters are still more concentrated,
ranging up to 68,000 mg/L total solids. Calcium is
much higher than in the B zone, but magnesium is
about the same. They are typical connate waters
chemically. At Infantas the waters often have
340
150
Time (MY)
5000-
10000-
15000
-3000
Figure 15. Lopatin diagram showing burial history at
La Cira. The La Luna source rock did not experience
6000
peak oil generation until late Miocene.The oil must have
been generated somewhere else, probably to the east.
different compositions from one fault block to
another. Table 5 shows the composition of some
typical waters from La Cira.
Concl usi ons Regardi ng Origin
and Mi grati on of Fl ui ds
Beginning 53 Ma, at the end of the Paleocene,
eastern Colombia ceased being a stable, passive shelf
in whose waters marine life grew abundantly. A
series of crustal movements began that involved as
much as 6 mi (10 km) of vertical movement and more
than 125 mi (200 km) of horizontal movement.
Mountains were uplifted possibly as high as Mount
Everest (29,000 ft; 8800 m) and then eroded, filling
the ancestral Magdalena trough with 30,000 ft (9000
m) of sediment. The petroleum that formed from the
organic matter deposited during the Cretaceous was
squeezed out into reservoirs. With the tremendous
crustal motions the reservoirs broke and spilled.
Some of the oil trickled along the unconformity
westward toward the Central Cordillera. Before
reaching the outcrop of the unconformity the oil was
covered with 20,000 ft (6000 m) of Oligocene and
Miocene sediments derived from the great mountains
to the east. This heated it to the point that it cracked
and formed gasoline. The La Cira oil started as
normal crude oil, but during its long and possibly
tortuous journey it became degraded and then was
later reheated.
De ve l opme nt and Product i on
Development
Infantas was developed on a well spacing of 10.9
ac (4.4 ha) per well. La Cira was first developed on
a spacing of 8.56 ac (3.5 ha) per well in a triangular
pattern. The spacing was later changed to 17.5 ac
(7.1 ha) per well. Studies by Hughes in 1941 showed
no increase in ultimate recovery on the closer spacing.
Wells were originally completed with 11-in. blank
casing and 8V2-in. slotted liner through the sand.
Later blank casing was run through the sand and
gun-perforated. Tubing was 2-in., 2%-in., and 3-in.
By 1940 all wells were pumping. Most wells had
electric motors, but a few were attached by rod lines
to a central pumping power called by the workmen
a Catalina after Saint Catherine's wheel.
Gas was reinjected starting in 1928. Condensate
was extracted from the gas and added to the crude
oil to reduce its viscosity. Channeling was severe,
especially in the B zone. Injection wells were mostly
halfway down the flanks of both fields. It was
estimated by Hughes in 1941 that 10 million bbl of
additional oil was recovered by the gas injection.
Later estimates were that at La Cira 8 million bbl
of additional oil could be ascribed to the gas injection
and at Infantas 44 million. Secondary gas caps
developed in both fields.
Original gas-oil ratio was 50 to 300 ftVbbl (8.8 to
52.8 m
3
gas/m
3
oil). The original viscosity at La Cira
C zone was 15 cp, which has increased to 32, and
341
Time (MY)
5000-
10000-
15000-
20000-
25000-
30000-
Figure 16. Lopatin diagram showing burial history at
foothills of Eastern Cordillera, 30 mi (50 km) east of
10000
La Cira. Umir and Lisama formations are present and
there is a great thickness of Eocene La Paz.
at Infantas 9 cp, which has increased to 15 cp. This
increase is probably due to the stripping of light ends
by the gas cycling. Sulfur ranges from 0.7 to 1.0%.
The average formation temperature is 100F (38C).
Original reservoir pressures were as shown in Table
6. These were estimated later because the bottom-
hole pressure measuring device had not been invented
when the field was discovered. Indeed, most of what
we now know about reservoir behavior was still to
be developed. When the Amerada bomb was intro-
duced in the middle 1930s, the geologists had to draw
the bottom-hole pressure maps because the petroleum
engineers had never drawn contours!
Production Data
The production of oil from Infantas and La Cira
for 60 years, from 1926 to 1986, has been 683 MMBO.
Yearly production is shown in the decline curves,
Figure 17. The summary of data is given in Table 7.
InfantasThe Infantas field was pretty well drilled
up by 1934. It produced originally from C zone and
later from B zone wells. Gas injection had started
in 1928. At first, the decline rate at Infantas was
very steep, about 10% per year. If this decline were
projected, the field would be producing only 1 MMBO/
yr in 1951, with a cumulative ultimate production
of 147 million bbl. However, the curve flattened
notably in 1942, probably as a result of a secondary
gas cap forming at the crest of the structure, which
gave a true gas-cap drive with gravity drainage.
Predictions of future production in 1941 by Hughes
and in 1951 by Bily (Lipstate and Bily, 1952) were
much too low. Infantas had actually produced 223
million bbl to December 1986 and was still producing
about 1 MMBO/yr.
La CiraDevelopment at La Cira continued until
1940. In 1942 and 1943, World War II interrupted
tanker traffic, so export almost stopped and
production was cut back from 18 to 7 MMBO/yr.
Water injection into the aquifer west of the field was
undertaken between 1946 and 1949. The increase in
production between 1948 and 1951 may have been
caused by drilling the additional wells even though
the edge water injection had little effect. From 1951
to 1958, the production declined from 10 to 6 MMBO/
yr, a rate of 6%/yr. Present production is about 3
MMBO/yr.
Waterflooding
The first attempt at waterflooding was made in
1946. Seven wells were drilled and perforated down-
dip from the La Cira field in the aquifer. Three wells
were perforated inside the field. The aquifer wells
had no apparent effect. From 1946 to 1949, the pool
wells recovered 54,000 bbl of oil as a result of injecting
770,000 bbl of water.
In 1955 the Forest Oil Co. of Bradford, Pennsyl-
vania, undertook waterflooding. They drilled and
cored four wells in La Cira, which showed great
lateral variation in thickness and quality of the sands.
Swelling clays were also noted. The oil was 23 API
with a viscosity of 30 cp. Residual oil after flooding
the cores was 18%. They proposed a nine-year
development plan with a five-spot pattern on 16 ac
342
Table 5. Water analyses from La Cira field (mg/l) (Dickey,
1933).
Zone Well No. Na Ca Mg
A 213
A 138
B 221
C 588
7107 130 215
2040 49 85
8208 977 429
6320 672
Table 6. Original reservoir pressures.
Field
Infantas
La Cira
La Cira
La Cira
S0
4
346
Datum,
Zone feet (m) subsea
C 2000(610
A 500(152
B 1200(366
C 3000(915
m)
m)
m)
m)
CI HC0
3
10,292 2454
1974 2220
15,512 431
37,200 108
Pressure
psi (bar)
875 (60.4)
350 (24.2)
750 (51.8)
1450(100.0)
spacing. In 1957, 280 ac were developed by 17 five-
spots: 24 injectors and 18 producers. From 1957 to
1982, a total of 241 injectors were drilled, some on
a five-spot and some on a seven-spot pattern. From
1966 to 1971, a polymer thickener was added to the
water. It reduced the injection rate and gave rise
to fracturing.
After 25 years of experience, it is obvious that the
injection of water has not been very effective. The
heterogeneities of the sand were such that only 60
to 80% of the sand was swept. The channels and
faults left areas unaffected. Some wells watered out
very early, supposedly through channel sands or fault
planes. The viscosity ratio was adverse.
A summary made in March 1987 indicated
61,650,000 bbl of oil additional recovery from the
waterflood. The estimation naturally depends on the
projected natural decline without water injection.
Some of the increased production is doubtless due
to infill drilling that opened up zones previously
untapped. A cumulative total of 801,000,000 bbl of
water had been injected.
Certainly no additional attempts at improved
recovery should be made without a detailed study
of the shape and character of the individual sand
channels. This would involve subdividing the
producing zones into thin time-rock units and
isopaching the individual sand channels within each
unit. Pressure measurements should be made using
the repeat formation tester in newly drilled wells
and interference tests in old wells.
EXPLORATION CONCEPTS
In 1915 when De Mares and Leonard met Benedum,
American interest in foreign oil had become wide-
spread. Many companies were operating in Mexico
(Owen, 1975). Shell discovered the Mene Grande field
in Venezuela in 1914. The United States was not
1926 1930 1940 1950 1960
YEAHLY OIL PRODUCTION
Figure 17. Production decline curves from 1926 to
1986, La Cira and Infantas fields.
yet in the European War, although it was later said
that "the Allies floated to victory on a sea of American
oil." Leonard had led Benedum to substantial
discoveries in Mexico in 1913. It was, therefore,
fashionable to prospect for oil in Latin America.
The Mexican fields were mostly discovered by
drilling on or near asphalt seeps, of which there were
very many. The first discovery in Venezuela was
made by drilling on the enormous Mene Grande seep
in 1914. In 1915, therefore, oil was discovered in Latin
America by drilling near seeps. Few geologists were
employed, and then mostly on a consulting basis.
Leonard is said to have received a 10% interest in
the Mexican properties from Benedum and Trees.
The value of anticlines was first obvious in Oklahoma
and California about 1912. It may be that the fact
that the Infantas seep was on an anticline visible
at the surface made it doubly easy to sell.
It is hard for us to imagine now what was the
role of geology in the oil business in 1918. There
were only three published geological papers on
Colombia (Karsten, 1858; Sievers, 1888; Hettner,
1892), all in German, and it would be surprising if
any of the geologists were familiar with them. After
the discovery in the 1920s, several papers were
published in both German and English.
Apparently some wells had been drilled in the
Magdalena Valley before Infantas No. 1. It was said
in one account that Benedum and Trees brought a
drilling rig from a previous wildcat up the river. A
seep at Guataqui, near Girardot, may have been the
locality.
There are dozens of oil seeps on both sides of the
Magdalena Valley, besides a large field of very heavy
oil (Cocorna). Probably this part of Colombia
contained oil fields comparable to the giant fields of
nearby Venezuela before the late Miocene orogeny
breached and eroded most of them.
Between 1918 and 1980,252 exploratory wells have
been drilled in the Middle Magdalena basin, of which
40 discovered commercial fields and 11 discovered
noncommercial fields. This is a success ratio of about
16%. Total recoverable reserves are estimated as 2
billion bbl of oil and 234 BCFG. (Ecopetrol unpub-
lished report, 1986). Only five fields contain more
than 100 million bbl. Two of these (Velasquez and
343
Table 7. Summary of production data of La Cira-lnfantas
fields.
Proved acres
Number of wells, all years
Current number of wells
Well spacing, acres per well.
Ultimate recoverable oil (million bbl)
Cumulative production through 1986
Annual production (million bbl/yr)
Present decline rate(%/y)
Original oil in place (million bbl)
'Secondary recovery (million bbl)
Recovery factor (%)
19,000 (7695 ha)
1671
960
La Cira
8.56 and 17.5
(3.5 and
7.1 ha)
503
459.9
3.1
4.5
2659
69 (water)
17.8
Infantas
10(4.1 ha)
234
223.2
1.0
3.5
1163
8 (gas)
'Above are the accepted values for secondary recovery. Review of the
decline curves suggests that the high permeability combined with the
steep dip makes it seem possible that the early gas injection at Infantas
gave rise to a good gas-cap gravity drainage drive, resulting in as much
as 75 million barrels of extra oil.
Provincia) are on central basin structures like La
Cira-lnfantas, and three (Cocorna, Cantagallo, and
Casabe) are near the west margin.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The assistance of the geologists and engineers of
Ecopetrol in the compilation of this report is
acknowledged. I am especially grateful to Antonio
Parada and Cesar Santiago.
REFERENCES CITED
Burke, K., 1988, Tectonic evolution of the Caribbean: Annual
Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, v. 16, p. 201-230.
Campbell, C. J., 1968, The Santa Marta wrench fault of Colombia
and its regional setting: Transactions Fourth Caribbean
Geological Congress, p. 247-261.
Case, J. E., and T. L. Holcombe, 1980, Geologic-tectonic map of
the Caribbean: U. S. Geological Survey.
Dickey, P. A., 1933, Additional information on the chemistry of
the oilfield waters from La Cira: Tropical Oil Company Report.
Dickey, P. A., 1966, Patterns of chemical composition in deep
subsurface waters: AAPG Bulletin, v. 50, p. 2472-2478.
Donoghue, D., 1951, The De Mares Concession: Petroleum
Engineer, March, p. A-39-A-40.
Ecopetrol, 1986, Distrito de Produccion, El Centro, 142 p.
Forero E. O., 1974, The Eocene of Northwestern South America:
M. S. Thesis, University of Tulsa.
Gibb, G. S., and E. K. Knowlton, 1956, The resurgent years, 1911-
1927: New York, Harper and Brothers, 754 p.
Hedberg, H. D., 1931, Cretaceous limestone as petroleum source
rock in northwestern Venezuela: AAPG Bulletin, v. 15, p. 229-
246.
Hettner, A., 1892, Die Kordillere von Bogota: Ergzh zu Permans
Mittteilungen, Gotha.
Hughes, R. V 1941, Pool studies: Tropical Oil Company Report.
Illich, H. A., 1983, Stratigraphic implications of geochemistry of
oils from Middle Magdalena Valley, Colombia (abs.): AAPG
Bulletin, v. 67, p. 487.
Lipstate, P. H., and C. Bily, 1952, Notes on the development and
behavior of the La C ira and Infantas fields: Ecopetrol Company
Report.
Karsten, H., 1858, Uber die geognostischen Verhaltnisse des
westlichen Columbien, der heitigen Republiken Neu-Granada
und Ecuador: Versammlungen des Deutches Naturforschun-
gen Gesellschaft in Wien, 1956, Vienna.
Mendoza, F., 1987, La reversion de la concesion De Mares: El
Tiempo, Bogota', August 15.
Morales, L. G., and the Colombian Petroleum Industry, 1958,
General geology and oil occurrences of Middle Magdalena
Valley, Colombia, in L. G. Weeks, ed., Habitat of oil: AAPG,
p. 641-695.
Oviedo, G. F. de, 1959, Historia general y natural de las Indias:
Biblioteca de Autores Espanoles, Madrid, v. Ill, p. 94.
Owen, E. W., 1975, The trek of the oil finders, history of the
exploration for petroleum: AAPG Memoir 6,1619 p.
Pilsbry, H. A., and A. A. Olsson, 1935, Tertiary freshwater
molluscs of the Magdalena Embayment, Colombia, with
Tertiary stratigraphy of the Middle Magdalena Valley, by O.
C. Wheeler: Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences
of Philadelphia, v. 87, p. 7-39.
Santiago Reyes, M. A., 1986, Cronica de la Concesion De Mares:
Ecopetrol, Bogota', 127 p.
Sievers, W., 1888, Die Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta und die
Sierra de Perija: Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft fur Erdkunde,
Beil. Bd. 23, p. 1-159.
Taborda, B., 1965, The geology of the de Mares Concession, in
Colombian Society of Geologists and Geophysicists, Field
Trips Guide Book 1959-1978, Bogota, p. 119-160.
Valderrama R. R., 1984, Atrapamiento estratigrafico de hidrocar-
buros en el Valle Medio del Magdalena: Ecopetrol Unpublished
Report.
Vasquez, E. E., and P. A. Dickey, 1972, Major faulting in northwest
Venezuela and its relation to global tectonics: Transactions
Sixth Caribbean Geological Conference, p. 191-202.
Waples, D. W., 1980, Time and temperature in petroleum
formation: application of Lopatin's method to petroleum
exploration: AAPG Bulletin, v. 64, p. 916-926.
344
Appendix 1. Field Description
Field name La Cira-Infantas
Ultimate recoverable reserves 737,000,000 bbl
Field location:
Country Colombia
State Santander
Basin/Province Middle Magdalena Valley
Field discovery:
Year first pay discovered Oligocene Colorado and Mugrosa formations 1917
Discovery well name and general location:
First pay Infantas No. 2 (in C zone) approx. location NW corner 2N-1E
(Infantas No. 1, completed later, located between 1Nand ISand IWand 1E)
Second pay B zone (well name and location not available)
Third pay A zone (well name and location not available)
Discovery well operator Benedum and Trees
Second pay NA
Third pay NA
IP:
First pay 800-1000 BOPD (Infantas No. 1 completed in 1918 had IP 2000 BOPD)
Second pay NA
Third pay NA
Geologic concept leading to discovery and method or methods used to delineate prospect
Large asphalt seep.
Structure:
Province/basin type Rifted convergent margin, Bally 332, Klemme III Be g
Tectonic history O
Marine geosyncline during Cretaceous. Uplift and erosion during Eocene. Uplift of Andes Mountains in <
Miocene. "
J
Regional structure
Field is on the central basin uplift in a half-graben with a large fault on east side of basin, onlap on
west side.
Local structure
Anticline broken by high-angle reverse fault. Oil trapped on downthrown side, oil-bearing strata exposed
on upthrown side.
Trap:
Trap type(s)
La Cira: lenticular sandstones over domal structure
Infantas: faulted anticline with lenticular sandstones
Basin stratigraphy (major stratigraphic intervals from surface to deepest penetration in field):
Chronostratigraphy Formation Depth to Top in ft (m)
Miocene Real Exposed
Oligocene Colorado Exposed
Mugrosa 1000 (305)
Eocene Esmeraldas 3000 (915)
Cretaceous Various 3000+ (915+)
345
Reservoir characteristics:
Number of reservoirs 3
Formations Oligocene Colorado Formation A zone and Mugrosa Formation B and C zones
Ages Oligocene
Depths to tops of reservoirs A zone, 600 ft (185 mj; B zone, 1100 ft (335 mj;
C zone, 2200 ft (670 m)
Gross thickness (top to bottom of producing interval) B zone, 1050-1250 ft (320-380 m);
C zone, 680 ft (205 m) average
Net thicknesstotal thickness of producing zones
Average 250 ft (75 m)
Maximum 500 ft (150 m)
Lithology
Fine to medium sandstone, subarkosic, sometimes argillaceous, in north-south fluvial channels
Porosity type Intergranular, some secondary
Average porosity 20-30%
Average permeability 2 to 1500 md, average 270 md
Seals:
Upper
Formation, fault, or other feature Oligocene shales and mudstones
Lithology Shale and mudstones
Lateral
Formation, fault, or other feature Fault in part, fades changes, OWC downdip
Lithology Various
Source:
Formation and age La Luna and Simiti, Cretaceous
Lithology Carbonate and shale
Average total organic carbon (TOC) NA
Maximum TOC >10%
Kerogen type (I, II, or III) //
Vitrinite reflectance (maturation) NA
Time of hydrocarbon expulsion NA
Present depth to top of source 1000 ft (300 m)
Thickness Variableup to 1000 ft (300 m)
Potential yield NA
Appendix 2. Production Data
Field name La Cira-lnfantas
Field size:
Proved acres 19,000
Number of wells all years 1671
Current number of wells 960
Well spacing Infantas, 10.9 ac (4.4 ha);
La Cira, 8.56 (3.47 ha) and 17.5 (7.09 ha)
Ultimate recoverable Infantas, 234 million bbl; La Cira, 503 million bbl
Cumulative production Infantas, 223 million bbl; La Cira, 460 million bbl (to December 1986)
Annual production Infantas, 1.0 million bbl; La Cira, 3.1 million bbl
Present decline rate Infantas, 3.5%; La Cira, 4.5%
346
Primary recovery Secondary operations initiated before primary complete
Secondary recovery 69+ to date, La Cira (water injection};
8 to date, Infantas (gas injection)
Enhanced recovery NA
Cumulative water production NA
Drilling and casing practices:
Amount of surface casing set NA
Casing program
Originally 11-in. casing with slotted liner. Later blank casing perforated. Severe sand flowage. Some collapsed
casing.
Drilling mud and bit program
Early wells drilled with cable tools; later rotary wells with "natural mud"; more recent wells NA
High pressure zones None in producing field
Completion practices:
Interval(s) perforated Sandy zones
Well treatment Aluminum hydroxychloride to stabilize clays
Formation evaluation:
Logging suites Gamma-ray, dual induction, double spaced neutron
Oil characteristics:
Type Naphthenic
API gravity Infantas, 25.9-27.9; La Cira, 21.4-24.1
Initial GOR 50-300 ft
3
/bbl
Sulfur, wt% 1.0
Viscosity, SUS Infantas, 32 cp (originally less viscous); La Cira, 32 cp
Field characteristics:
Average elevation Surface 300 ft (90 m) MSL
Initial pressure 1450 psi at 3000 ft (100 bar at 915 m)
Present pressure Varies <
Pressure gradient Normal -E
Temperature NA .
Geothermal gradient 0.84F/100ft(1.53C/100 m) _i
Drive Dissolved gas; gravity drainage at Infantas
Oil-water contact La Cira, -3400 to -3700 ft (-1036 to -1128 m);
Infantas, -2500 ft(-762 m) (tiltednorth)
Connate water 35% est.
Water salinity, TDS 10,000-40,000 mg/L
Resistivity of water NA
Transportation method and market for oil and gas:
Pipeline to coast, local refinery; 1926-1950 mostly export; since, mostly domestic
347