Eslinger, Eric1, Robert Everett2, Scotty Tuttle3,
David Dennard3
(1) Eric Geoscience, Inc. and The College of Saint Rose, Glenmont, NY
(2) Consultant, Victoria, BC
(3) Dominion E&P, Inc. (currently Mission Resources, Inc.), Houston, TX
ABSTRACT: Net Pay from Petrophysical Analysis
of 29 Wilcox Wells, SW Bonus Field,
Wharton County, Texas, using a Multi-Well and Multi-Dimensional Clustering
Analysis
Coupled with a Mineralogy-Based Forward Modeling
Procedure
A petrophysical analysis
was made in a ~3000 feet thick Wilcox Formation multiple-sand
gas-bearing sequence in 29 wells from Southwest Bonus Field, Wharton County, Texas. A
29-well clustering
analysis
using RHOB, NPHI, GR, and DT was used to probabilistically
assign samples in each well to ten "rock types" (5 sandstones, 3 siltstones, and
2 shales). The only well with whole core was used as a "model" well. Porosity,
permeability, and water saturation profiles were determined for the model well using a
forward-modeling
procedure
based on: 1- the clustering results; 2- the mineralogy of each
cluster; 3- a database for well log responses for minerals and fluids; and 4- a published
(by others) method that uses porosity, grain density, and mineralogy surface area to
estimate permeability. The same inputs used for the model well were also applied to the
other 28 wells.
Net pay was computed in each well using a suite of five cutoff parameters: total porosity,
free porosity, permeability, bulk volume water, and water saturation.
"Opportunity" was defined to be depths where net pay exists but where no
perforations had been made. Total net pay (all wells) was 4382 feet and total
"opportunity" was 2338 feet. Therefore, "opportunity" footage was 53%
of total net pay.
The same 29 wells also were analyzed using a modification of the ECS* (Elemental Capture
Spectroscopy [Schlumberger] procedure
), and the resulting petrophysical profiles were
similar to those obtained using the clustering and forward modeling
procedure
.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90026©2004 AAPG Annual Meeting, Dallas, Texas, April 18-21, 2004.