Application of Geographic
Information
System to Exploration
Studies in Sedimentary Basins
Betty M. Miller
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is currently exploring the feasibility of
applying Geographic
Information
Systems
(GIS) technology to the development of a
working prototype system that will provide the framework for three-dimensional
analysis of sedimentary basins. GIS technology involves the integration of
mapping and database functions that enable the user not only to integrate and
manipulate spatial (coordinate) data with attribute (thematic) data to combine
complex
geographic
, geologic, and geophysical data sets into resultant overlay
and composite maps but also to conduct multivariate exploratory data analysis
and have access to a variety of options for analyzing these databases.
The San Juan basin, a 13,500-mi2 Laramide structural basin in northwestern New Mexico and southwestern Colorado, was chosen for the pilot project. The basin encompasses a maximum of over 15,000 ft of Paleozoic to Eocene sedimentary rock and contains economic deposits of natural gas, oil, coal, and uranium. Successful exploration in this basin requires an understanding of the complex stratigraphy and structural geology controlling the distribution of these resources.
GIS technology applied to the San Juan basin includes both surface and
subsurface data sets that establish a three-dimensional perspective of the
basin's fundamental stratigraphic and structural framework and aid in the
identification of the basins temporal and tectonic relationships relative to
origin and occurrence of its resources. Among the digital databases used for
surface mapping is the US GeoData system from the USGS's National Mapping
Program, which includes Digital Elevation Models (DEM) for terrain elevations;
Digital Line Graphs (DLG) for planimetric information
on boundaries,
transportation, hydrography, and the U.S. Public Land Survey System; and Land
Use and Land Cover (LULC) data. Additional databases used for surface mapping
include surficial geology, locations of oil and gas wells, well status, and oil
and gas fields. Databases for subsurface mapping include structure contour,
isopach, and facies maps for the major oil- and gas-producing formations
(Pictured Cliffs, Gallup and Dakota Sandstones, and Mesaverde Group); cross
sections; paleogeographic reconstructions; geophysical and geochemical maps; and
composited map products. Current technology and software being used include the
GIS ARC/INFO system on the PRIME computer, the Petroleum
Information
-Well
History Control System (PI-WHCS) well database, and mapping software such as
Interactive Surface Modeling (ISM) and Triangulated Irregular Network (TIN).
GIS technology provides the geologist with new tools for innovative research
in geologic interpretation, for updating information
databases, for development
of new concepts in basin analysis, and for applications to new resource
appraisal methodology.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91023©1989 AAPG Eastern Section, Sept. 10-13, 1989, Bloomington, Indiana.