Hitch Field (T33S-R34W, Seward County, Kansas) produces from Upper Mississippian Chester sandstone, deposited in a narrow valley incised into Mississippian Ste. Genevieve and St. Louis limestones. Upon discovery, a 100 foot oil column filled most of the reservoir volume, accompanied by a small gas cap and a minor water leg. Midway within the oil column, 20-30 feet of otherwise porous sandstone is completely filled with solid hydrocarbon. The tar mat composition is similar to produced oil but with concentrated heavy components, indicating precipitation, rather than biodegradation, as a causal mechanism.
Although historical core descriptions reported "dead oil stain", and a low permeability layer was well known from routine core analyses and well tests, the complete occlusion of the pore system was not originally recognized. Core cleaning procedures removed most of the tar mat, resulting in acceptable porosity and grain density values, and conventional wireline log calculations indicated porous sandstone at irreducible water saturation, as expected. The tar mat is readily apparent with UV fluorescence core photography, thin section and SEM petrography, and NMR wireline logs, but these techniques were not incorporated into early field studies.
The Hitch tar mat went unrecognized for 20 years, despite multiple
cores and standard wireline log suites. Many producing reservoirs
in the Hugoton Embayment contain similar oils, at similar pressures
and temperatures, implying that in situ precipitation of heavy
hydrocarbons should not have been unique to It Hitch. It is likely
that other tar mats, probably in reservoirs with disappointing
production performance, are waiting to be recognized.