--> Abstract: A Review of Fault Seal Calibration Methods, by Graham Yielding, Alan Roberts, Pete Bretan, Brett Freeman, Dave Quinn, and Michiel van Noorden; #90082 (2008)
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A Review of Previous HitFaultNext Hit Seal Calibration Methods

Graham Yielding, Alan Roberts, Pete Bretan, Brett Freeman, Dave Quinn, and Michiel van Noorden
Badley Geoscience Ltd, Spilsby, United Kingdom

Calibration is a necessary step in the workflow for prediction of Previous HitfaultNext Hit seal. It is required because there is no direct way to predict the hydraulic behaviour of a Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone at the scale of a hydrocarbon Previous HittrapNext Hit. Therefore, over the last 20 years two general approaches have been developed:

(i) Invent a simple algorithm which attempts to capture some salient feature of the Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone. Then look at known Previous HittrapNext Hit-bounding faults to see if there is any relationship between the algorithm and the presence or strength of a Previous HitfaultNext Hit seal (field or sub-surface calibration). Clay Smear Potential, Shale Smear Factor & Shale Gouge Ratio are example algorithms.
(ii) Measure hydraulic properties of Previous HitfaultNext Hit-zone samples (lab calibration). Then map these results onto the appropriate parts of Previous HittrapNext Hit-bounding faults.

The calibration results may be summarised in a probabilistic way (chance of seal or no-seal) or a deterministic way (how strong is the seal). Seal strength is typically described by Hg-air threshold pressure in the lab or static pressure differences in the subsurface (e.g. hydrocarbon buoyancy pressure). Subsurface traps are unlikely to be filled exactly to Previous HitfaultNext Hit-seal failure, because around half the trapped column is likely to escape once this point is reached.

Different workers have variously parameterised seal strength as a linear, log-linear or stepped function of Previous HitfaultNext Hit-zone composition. Further uncertainty is introduced when converting the calibrated seal strength to potential hydrocarbon column height, because of the variability of subsurface hydrocarbon fluids (capillary properties and density).

Using exploration and appraisal examples, some of the assumptions in this workflow are critically assessed in order to suggest uncertainty ranges that should pragmatically be applied in Previous HitfaultTop seal predictions.

AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Cape Town, South Africa 2008 © AAPG Search and Discovery