--> Abstract: Using Outcrop Geology to Constrain Uncertainty in Three-Dimensional Structural Models of Sub-Seismic Scale Fault Networks, by Jonathan Imber, Jonathan J. Long, Ruth H. Wightman, Richard R. Jones, Kenneth J. McCaffrey, Robert E. Holdsworth, Nicolas S. Holliman, and Nicola De Paola; #90078 (2008)
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Previous HitUsingNext Hit Outcrop Geology to Constrain Uncertainty in Three-Dimensional Structural Models of Sub-Seismic Scale Fault Networks

Jonathan Imber1, Jonathan J. Long1, Ruth H. Wightman1, Richard R. Jones2, Kenneth J. McCaffrey1, Robert E. Holdsworth1, Nicolas S. Holliman3, and Nicola De Paola1
1Earth Sciences, University of Durham, Durham, United Kingdom
2Geospatial Research Limited, Durham, United Kingdom
3e-Science Research Institute, University of Durham, Durham, United Kingdom

Three-dimensional (3D) seismic data have insufficient resolution to image Previous HitfaultsNext Hit with throws less than ca. 20 m. Despite their potential impact on reservoir performance, the true 3D structure of sub-seismic scale fault networks has only been determined in exceptional circumstances, for example by cutting serial sections through Previous HitfaultsNext Hit in unconsolidated sediments, or within active opencast mines. A further difficulty has been that most structural datasets from onshore analogues have been collected Previous HitusingNext Hit traditional Previous HitmappingNext Hit techniques, which require the 3D geology and surface topography to be projected onto a 2-D plane (or along a 1-D scan line). Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) now enables structural geologists to produce 3D representations of geological outcrops (“digital outcrop models”), but Previous HitfaultsNext Hit are generally recorded as intersections on the outcrop surface, rather than planes.

We use a digital outcrop model of sub-seismic scale, post-depositional normal Previous HitfaultsNext Hit from SE Scotland to illustrate a methodology for extrapolating fault surface traces to create a fully 3D fault model. The Previous HitfaultsNext Hit are exposed on the foreshore and in cliffs behind the beach. We created a pseudo-3D seismic Previous HitgridNext Hit across the digital outcrop model and extrapolated fault sticks from the surface intersections Previous HitusingNext Hit geologically-driven rules. The cliff section provides constraints on the range of permissible fault dips, fault heights, and the impact of host rock stratigraphy on fault bifurcation. The geometries of larger-scale post-depositional normal Previous HitfaultsNext Hit observed in 3D seismic datasets have been used to guide our interpretations of fault tip- and branch-Previous HitlinesNext Hit. These geological rules provide a conceptual framework to generate multiple 3D realisations from a single digital outcrop model, which could be used to further test the implications of small Previous HitfaultsTop on production flow.

 

AAPG Search and Discover Article #90078©2008 AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas