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GCImaging
Deep Gas Targets Across Congested
Marine
Production Areas
By
Bob A. Hardage1, Randy Remington1, Michael Deangelo1, and Khaled Fouad1
Search and Discovery Article #40190 (2006)
Posted May 2, 2006
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the authors and entitled, “Imaging Deep Gas in Crowded Areas,” in AAPG Explorer, April, 2006. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage. Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas, Austin, Texas ([email protected] )
General Statement
Gas producers across the northern shelf of the Gulf of Mexico are now targeting super-deep gas plays--some targets at depths of 26,000 to 33,000 ft (eight to 10 km).
To
image a target properly at a depth D,
seismic
data
should be acquired with
source-to-receiver offsets that extend to a distance equal to or exceeding
target depth D. Thus, to create optimal images of these super-deep gas targets,
seismic
data
need to be acquired with receiver offsets extending to eight to 10
km away from the source.
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uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuProduction congestionuP-P & P-SV imagesuConclusionsuAcknowledgment
uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuProduction congestionuP-P & P-SV imagesuConclusionsuAcknowledgment
uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuProduction congestionuP-P & P-SV imagesuConclusionsuAcknowledgment
uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuProduction congestionuP-P & P-SV imagesuConclusionsuAcknowledgment |
New Two new
The distinction
between stationary seafloor sensors and towed-cable sensors is important
when considering the challenge of acquiring long-offset
Example of Production Congestion An example of
production congestion existing across some shallow-water areas of the
Gulf of Mexico is shown in Figure 2. Here, a
six-mile (10 km) diameter circle is positioned on the map to illustrate
the difficulty of towing a six-mile cable across the area in any azimuth
direction without snagging the cable on a platform, well head, or other
surface-exposed facility. In contrast to the difficulty of executing
towed-cable operations across this area, north-south OBC lines AA and BB
and east-west OBC line CC (actual profiles used in one long-offset OBC
Once OBC sensors are deployed on the seafloor, a source boat towing only a short air gun array can maneuver through the congested area with minimal difficulty. Seafloor sensors are usually deployed along profiles extending 50 to 100 km. Thus source-to-receiver offsets of 10 km and greater are easily implemented with OBC/OBS technology for purposes of super-deep imaging in areas heavily congested with production facilities.
Example of P-P and P-SV ImagesAn additional
appeal of OBC/OBS technology is that 4-C An example of P-P
and P-SV images constructed from 4-C OBC Encircled structural features A and B are interpreted to be depth-equivalent geology. The time warping technique positions reflections A and B in time-warped P-SV image space to within 100 ms of their positions in P-P image space. A vertical salt
structure blanks out the P-P and the P-SV images approximately midway
between CDP coordinates 19,600 and 21,000. Using local Features 1 through
4 on the P-SV image indicate a cyclic depositional process, which is
important geologic information that is not obvious in the P-P image.
Feature 5 is an example of P-SV
Two important
conclusions can be made from these
In addition to the
The U.S. Department of Energy funded this research study; WesternGeco
allowed the research team access to selected 4-C OBC multiclient |
