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Helium shows what

seismic cannot —

resource saturation.

SUBSOIL HELIUM GAS

HELIUM GAS AND ITS' CONCENTRATIONS

  • Noble gas Exceptional chemical inertness

  • Second most abundant element in the Universe after hydrogen (~25% by mass)

  • Extremely light (second only to hydrogen) with a very small atomic size (~0.2 nm)

  • Physically stable; does not form compounds under normal conditions

  • Lowest solubility in water among all gases

  • Non-biogenic origin, unlike methane or hydrogen

  • Highly mobile, enabling efficient migration through geological formations ⁴He (radiogenic) is generated by alpha decay of U–Th series elements in crustal rocks

  • ³He (primordial, rare) originates from mantle processes or was trapped during Earth’s accretion

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NOBLE GAS ISOTOPES in PETROLEUM SYSTEMS

  • Organic matter is commonly enriched in uranium (U), enabling radiogenic noble gas generation.

  • Hydrocarbons are enriched with radiogenic noble gases: ⁴He, ⁴⁰Ar, ¹³⁶Xe, Rn

  • During hydrocarbon migration, noble gases undergo fractionation, modifying their relative abundances.

  • Hydrocarbon reservoirs exhibit excess radiogenic helium (⁴He).

  • He/Ne/Ar ratios differ significantly from atmospheric and crustal signatures.

  • These deviations provide diagnostic fingerprints of subsurface processes.

  • Well-established scientific fact: radiogenic noble gases—especially ⁴He—are reliable indicators of hydrocarbon generation, migration, and accumulation.

HELIUM MIGRATION

  • Migration occurs through two primary mechanisms:

(1) self-migration, where helium moves independently through porous media, and

(2) carrier-gas transport, where it ascends with gases such as methane (CH₄), carbon dioxide (CO₂), or nitrogen (N₂).

  • Helium distribution is controlled by proximity to helium-generating sources, their geological age, reservoir porosity and permeability, and the presence of effective trapping structures.

  • Helium accumulates in reservoirs with sufficient storage capacity and trapping conditions.

  • However, all reservoirs continuously leak excess helium, which migrates vertically toward the surface.

  • Even microfractures, combined with favorable physicochemical conditions, are sufficient to initiate this process.

  • Seal rocks such as clays or evaporites may retard migration but rarely prevent it due to helium’s high mobility.

  • Migration rates can reach up to ~1,000 meters per day.

  • Helium is detectable at the surface only by high-precision instrumentation even at very low concentrations, providing a reliable indicator of active subsurface processes.

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TRUE HELIUM ANOMALIES

  • True helium anomalies in near-surface gases are associated with subsurface reservoirs containing natural resources.

  • Anomalies are detectable at the earth’s surface only with Digital Geochemistry-based  high-precision instruments and deep data processing.

  • Heliometric Data is collected in real-time in-situ through high-density onshore and offshore field surveys.

  • Each survey point generates large datasets (hundreds–thousands of data rows).

  • Collected field digital data includes helium concentration, environmental parameters, diagnostics, and GPS location etc.

  • Real-time quality control ensures reliable and consistent datasets during field operations.

  • Spatial data analysis and AI creates high-resolution helium concentration maps.

  • Helium anomalies integrated with geological and geophysical data indicate potential prospects and resource saturation at the depth.

  • Helium anomalies around existing production wells may be disturbed under effect of depression from the well operations. 

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Copyright © 2026 Heologic Group (USA). All rights reserved.

 

All technologies and materials presented are independently developed or lawfully used. Unauthorized use is strictly prohibited.

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