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GCReflection Response of Class Two Reservoirs*
By
Diana Sava1 and Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article # 40244 (2007)
Posted July 18, 2007
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author, in AAPG Explorer, June, 2007, and entitled “Reflections on Class Two Reservoirs”. 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 at Austin ([email protected])
Geophysicists define gas reservoirs as Class 1, 2, 3 or 4, depending on their P-P amplitude-versus-angle (AVA) response. The P-P AVA behaviors on which this classification scheme is based are shown as generalized curves in Figure 1. Although this reservoir terminology originated in the Gulf of Mexico and was applied initially only to sandstone reservoirs, the nomenclature is now used across basins worldwide and is applied to reservoirs other than gas-bearing sandstones.
uFigure captionsuResponse of reservoir classesuExampleuConclusion
uFigure captionsuResponse of reservoir classesuExampleuConclusion
uFigure captionsuResponse of reservoir classesuExampleuConclusion
uFigure captionsuResponse of reservoir classesuExampleuConclusion
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Response of Reservoir ClassesInspection of Figure 1 shows that: 1) A Class 1 reservoir exhibits a strong, positive P-P reflection response at normal incidence, and that response then decreases as the angle of incidence increases. 2) A Class 2 reservoir has a small P-P response (either positive [Class 2A] or negative [Class 2B] polarity) at normal incidence, and its P-P response becomes more negative as the angle of incidence increases. 3) A Class 3 reservoir has a strong, negative P-P response at normal incidence that becomes more negative as the angle of incidence increases. 4) A Class 4 reservoir has a strong, negative response at normal incidence, just as does a Class 3 reservoir, but its P-P response decreases (becomes less negative) with increasing angle of incidence.
Only Class 2
reservoirs are considered in this article because Class 2 reservoirs are
faint, low-amplitude P-P events and sometimes are almost invisible in
P-P
Example
One Class 2
reservoir that has been widely publicized is the Alba Field reservoir in
the UK sector of the North Sea. P-P and P-SV
Among the
published P-P and P-SV profiles across the Alba Field are those
displayed as Figure 2, which show that the
Alba target produces a minor response in P-P image space, but a bold
reflection package in P-SV image space. This image comparison
illustrates that Class 2 reservoir interpretation can be difficult in a
conventional To illustrate the P-P and P-SV reflectivities associated with the Alba Field reservoir, we represented the target as a simple, two-layer Earth model defined by averaging published log data across the reservoir and its bounding units. Resulting reflectivity responses for the target interface are shown in Figure 3. The P-SV and the P-P reflectivity curves have zero and near-zero values, respectively, at normal incidence and then slope toward negative values. As the incidence angle increases, P-SV reflectivity reaches a magnitude of –5 percent quickly at an incidence angle of ~8 degrees and continues to increase to almost –15 percent at an incidence angle of ~30 degrees.
In the
Conclusion
An important conclusion is that
multi-component
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