--> Gee Whiz Geophysics…But What About the Log Data?, by Jeff S. Arbogast and Steven M. Goolsby, #40181 (2005).
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Gee Whiz Geophysics…But What About the Log Previous HitDataNext Hit?

By

Jeff S. Arbogast1 and Steven M. Goolsby2

 

Search and Discovery Article #40181 (2005)

Posted December 22, 2005

 

*Oral Presentation at AAPG Mid-Continent Section Meeting, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, September 10-13, 2005.

  

Click to view presentation in PDF format.

 

1Petroleum Software Technologies, LLC, 14001 E. Iliff Avenue, #414, Aurora, CO 80014, phone: (303) 337-1785, fax: (303) 745- 0785 ([email protected])

2Goolsby Brothers and Associates, Inc, 8174 South Holly Street, #507, Centennial, CO 80122 ([email protected])

 

Abstract 

Geologists and geophysicists have been trying to squeeze as much usable information as possible from Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit since before the discovery of bright spots. Today they Previous HitdisplayNext Hit this information with 3D visualization software, and 3D Previous HitseismicNext Hit is touted as the answer to all things….but what about the log Previous HitdataNext Hit? 

Most log Previous HitdataNext Hit (even older log Previous HitdataNext Hit) has 10-25 times better vertical resolution thanseismic Previous HitdataNext Hit. However, many geologists and geophysicists today treat log Previous HitdataNext Hit much like it was treated in 1935. They obtain copies of the logs, Previous HitdisplayNext Hit them in cross sections, correlate them, and map them. Mixed-vintage, incomplete, and/or poor quality log Previous HitdataNext Hit, however, can lead to serious problems in interpretation. Without accurate, normalized, high-resolution log Previous HitdataNext Hit for every well in a study area, geological correlations and maps may be incorrect. As a result, 3D Previous HitseismicNext Hit interpretations based on this Previous HitdataNext Hit may turn out to be amazingly colorful but inaccurate representations of what is actually happening in the subsurface. 

Today the oil and gas industry is challenged with evaluating declining production in aging fields, in many cases involving hundreds of wells with log Previous HitdataNext Hit recorded from 1935 to last week. New plays often involve laminated, poor-quality, low permeability, fractured, or unconventional reservoirs. Using resistivity and SP inversion processing and neural network modeling run on their PC, geologists and geophysicists can generate complete suites of accurate, high-resolution, edited, log, core, and production Previous HitdataTop for every well in a study area. Examples from the Mid-Continent, California, and Rocky Mountains are shown.

 

 

Oklahoma ES log, showing main pay and additional low-resistivity, thin-bedded, yet productive sandstones.

 

Using resistivity and SP inversion modeling and neural networks together.