Why Do You Think Wireline Logs Will Recognize Your Carbonate Facies; Here Is How It Works
F. Jerry Lucia, Bureau of Economic Geology, John A. and Katherine G. Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX
Wireline logs can identify only
a limited number of facies, and geologic studies often require many more facies
than is possible it identify. Wireline logs measure physical properties, not
geologic descriptions, so only facies, as defined by core descriptions, having
unique physical properties can be identified with logs. Facies defined by
lithology can normally be identified using a combination of neutron, density, PE
and sonic logs. Facies not defined by lithology are more difficult.
Fundamentally, only facies that have unique gamma-
ray
, porosity, or pore-size
values can be uniquely identified with wireline logs. Acoustic-porosity
relationships can sometime be used to define highly moldic facies and infer a
moldic grainstone, but these relationships must be used with extreme caution.
Saturation-porosity relationships describe pore-size distributions that can be
linked with basic rock-fabric facies under ideal conditions. These ideal
conditions, however, often to not exist and we are left with porosity and
gamma-
ray
logs. Gamma-
ray
values tend to be lower in grain-dominated than in
mud-dominated fabrics, but the presence of diagenetic uranium complicates this
basic tenet. Porosity in grain-dominated fabrics tends to be higher than in
mud-dominated fabrics, even after early dolomitization. Therefore, vertical
porosity and gamma-
ray
profiles can often be used to identify vertical sequences
of mud-to-grain-dominated fabrics. Grain types must be inferred from
stratigraphy. Because of the limited ability of wireline logs to identify
carbonate facies, the selection of facies used to construct a geologic model is
critical.