--> Abstract: Fracture Identification and Analysis of the Arbuckle and Mississippi Reservoirs: an example from Osage County, NE Oklahoma, Olubunmi Elebiju, Article #90097 (2009)
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Fracture Identification and Analysis of the Arbuckle and Mississippi Reservoirs: an example from Osage County, NE Oklahoma

Olubunmi Elebiju1,   Shane E. Matson2,   Ha T. Mai3

1Oklahoma University , 2Spyglass Energy Group, LLC , 3Oklahoma University

For the last decade, independent operators have used conventional interpretation methodology from 3-D Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit to map Mid-Continent carbonate reservoirs. Increasingly, volumetric Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes such as coherence, curvature, and amplitude gradients calculated from the 3-D Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit are being incorporated into the Mid-Continent exploration workflow to better characterize subtle carbonate features such as karsting, tectonic faulting and fracturing, and hydrothermal dissolution, that are difficult to image from standard 3-D Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit alone.

We present the results of Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit analysis of several 3-D Previous HitseismicNext Hit surveys acquired in Osage County, Oklahoma focusing on Ordovician dolomite and Mississippian limestone and chert reservoirs which are typically classified as fracture-controlled karst reservoirs that have been diagenetically altered by tectonic faulting and fracturing, subaerial exposure, and hydrothermal alteration processes. We employed the use of geometric Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes to identify fault and fracture distribution within these reservoirs that cannot be seen in more conventional 3-D single trace Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes.

Arbuckle and Mississippi features imaged on coherence and most-positive and most-negative curvature geometric attribute volumes Previous HitdisplayTop unique polygonal features and oriented lineaments resulting from regional tectonic overprint and localized structures and flexures over cockpit karst topography. Rose diagrams of fracture length and azimuth calculated from geometric attribute horizon slices show the spatial variation of fracture density and orientation.

Initial results from the Osage County suggest that basement structure and paleo-topography of the Arbuckle dolomite plays a role in the distribution and fracturing of some of the lineaments seen in Ordovician and Mississippian reservoirs.

 

 

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