Cross-Section Balancing – Surface Restoration – Volumic Restoration: All These
Tools
Exist, Now What To Do With Them?
Isabelle Moretti
IFP, Rueil-Malmaison, France
The principles of the
structural
geology have been used for long time to propose the horizon and fault geometry. They are based on top-bottom relationship of the horizons and on the fault-horizon cut-off theoretical angles deduced from surface observations and laboratory experiments. Now the subsurface data acquisition is in a mature phase and commonly the need to invent the markers that do not appear on the seismic has disappeared. However
structural
geology and restoration process remain useful to improve the coherence of the subsurface data
interpretation
and to have an idea of the initial geometry and of the deformation versus time. Restoration could be done in cross-section, 2D, in surface, 2.5D and in volume, fully 3D. The 3D
tools
that we used, is based on a mechanical retro-deformation. If the preservation of area or volume is the main hypothesis, variations happen locally and are commonly interpreted in term of fracture probability. One way to preserve volume (resp. area) is to preserve area (resp. length) and thickness; other solutions exist that correspond to different deformation modes.
AAPG Search and Discover Article #90066©2007 AAPG Hedberg Conference, The Hague, The Netherlands