--> Abstract: Reserve Estimation Techniques Utilizing 3-D Seismic Attributes, by D. R. Paul; #90990 (1993).
[First Hit]

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PAUL, DOUGLAS ROY, Landmark Graphics, Houston, TX

ABSTRACT: Reserve Estimation Techniques Utilizing Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Attributes

In difficult economic climates, reliable petroleum reserve estimation is essential in determining the viability of developing prospective fields and reservoirs. In most instances, the available well information is inadequate to generate a confident reserve estimate. The increased use of three-dimensional (Previous Hit3-DNext Hit) Previous HitseismicNext Hit has significantly increased an interpreter's ability to calculate volumetrics by providing a mechanism in which reservoir structure beyond well control can be more accurately delineated. The use of Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes in combination with structure for volumetric analysis has, however, remained largely underused. The objective of this paper is to illustrate techniques in which Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes may be Previous HitappliedNext Hit to reserve estimation through the analysis of several selec ed case studies. These case studies encompass a variety of geological terrains over both onshore and Previous HitoffshoreNext Hit fields in Europe and North America. A brief description of each follows: North Frisco city field, onshore Alabama--highly productive, low-resistivity sand pinching out against granite basement highs; Roar field, Danish North Sea--Cretaceous chalk with seismically identifiable gas-water contact and frequency differentiated reservoirs; Tableland field, onshore Canada--Devonian reef with porosity defined by Previous HitseismicNext Hit amplitudes; Previous HitoffshoreNext Hit Gulf of Mexico--clastic reservoirs with salt tectonics in highly faulted terrain; and Intall field, onshore New Mexico--Aeolian sand with anhydritic lenses differentiated on the basis of Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitinversionNext Hit. In each case, the reserve estimate generated sing Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes will be compared to that generated using a more typical Previous HitstructuralTop approach.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90990©1993 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, The Hague, Netherlands, October 17-20, 1993.