--> Abstract: Seismic Multiattribute Analysis for Shale Gas/Oil Within The Austin Chalk and Eagle Ford Shale In A Submarine Volcanic Terrain, Maverick Basin, South Texas, by Osareni Ogiesoba; #90202 (2014)
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Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Multiattribute Previous HitAnalysisNext Hit for Shale Gas/Oil Within The Austin Chalk and Eagle Ford Shale In A Submarine Volcanic Terrain, Maverick Basin, South Texas

Osareni Ogiesoba
U Texas / BEG

Abstract

We conducted Previous HitseismicNext Hit multiattribute Previous HitanalysisNext Hit by Previous HitcombiningNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit data with wireline logs to determine hydrocarbon sweet spots and predict resistivity distribution (using the deep induction Previous HitlogNext Hit) within the Austin Chalk and Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas. Our investigations show that hydrocarbon sweet spots are characterized by high resistivity, high total organic carbon (TOC), high acoustic impedance (i.e., high brittleness), and low bulk volume water, suggesting that a com-bination of these Previous HitlogNext Hit properties is required to identify sweet spots. Although the lower Austin Chalk and upper and lower Eagle Ford Shale intervals constitute hydrocarbon-sweet-spot zones, resistivity values and TOC concentrations are not evenly distributed; thus, the rock intervals are not productive everywhere. Most productive zones within the lower Austin Chalk are associated with Eagle Ford Shale vertical-subvertical en echelon faults, suggesting hydrocarbon migration from the Eagle Ford Shale. Although the quality factor (Q) was not one of the primary attributes for predicting resistivity, it nevertheless can serve as a good reconnaissance tool for predicting resistivity, brittleness, and bulk volume water-saturated zones. In addition, local hydrocarbon accumulations within the Austin Chalk may be related to Austin TOC-rich zones or to migration from the Eagle Ford Shale through fractures. Some wells have high water production because the water-bearing middle Austin Chalk on the downthrown side of Eagle Ford Shale regional faults constitutes a large section of the horizontal Previous HitwellTop, as evidenced by the Q attribute. Furthermore, the lower Austin Chalk and upper Eagle Ford Shale together appear to constitute a continuous (unconventional) hydrocarbon play.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90202 © AAPG/STGS Geoscience Technology Workshop, Eagle Ford plus Adjacent Plays and Extensions Workshop, February 24-26, 2014, San Antonio, Texas