In 2019 IGI was able to support Carlos da Silva’s partner to undertake some charity work with Dig Deep. Dig Deep works to provide clean drinking water, proper toilets and good hygiene in rural Kenya, where less than 20% of the people have access to these services.
The Faroe-Shetland Basin (FSB) is a prolific deep-water hydrocarbon province with world-class oil, gas and condensate discoveries within reservoirs ranging in age from Neoarchean fractured basement to Devonian, Carboniferous, Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous and Paleogene clastics, including the Clair Field with an estimated 10 x 109 barrels of in-place…
held in Dublin, Ireland from 29th to 30th October 2019. Mischa will be presenting a talk on “Source rocks development in offshore Ireland in the context of the new standard lithostratigraphic framework”, work that was carried as part of the PIP and PAD funded ISPSG project 16/04.
held at Olympia in London, from Monday 30th September until Wednesday 2nd October 2019. Tiago will be lecturing in the pre-meeting course on the Africa’s Thermal Regime and its Impact on Petroleum Systems on Monday 30th September, his lecture is entitled: Modelling the Past. Approaches and Pitfalls.
A multitude of maturity parameters using a range of different compound classes have been tested and developed in the past for use in oils, in order to determine the maturity of their source rocks.
This extensive geochemical database has been completed in a major project funded by the Oil & Gas Authority, and has now been made freely available to all via the OGA website.
Further details can be found here: [ProcessButton id="31"]
We are pleased to announce the release of version 1. 19. 0. 10 of p:IGI+ and 1. 19. 0. 7 of Metis Transform. This version includes a number of new features and performance enhancements, and is a advised update for all users of p:IGI+ in particular.
Paul Farrimond and Mischa Gehlen will be attending the 29th International Meeting on Organic Geochemistry (IMOG 2019) which is being held in Gothenburg, Sweden from 1st to 6th September 2019.
The demethylated hopane 17α,21β(H)-28,30-bisnorhopane (Figure 1) is a compound regularly used as a stratigraphic marker, particularly for Upper Jurassic source rocks and associated expelled oils within the North Sea and Norwegian Sea; however, there is still very little known of its origin. Figure 1.