FRACTURE
CHARACTERIZATION IN THE MIOCENE MONTEREY USING RESISTIVITY IMAGING,
INTERVAL TESTING, AND DIPOLE SONIC TECHNIQUES
GRAYSON, Steve, Schlumberger Oilfield Svcs, 1710 Callens Rd, Ventura, CA 93003, [email protected], CARLSEN, Ted W., Venoco Inc, 6267 Carpinteria Ave, Suite 100, Carpinteria, CA 93013, KAMERLING, Marc J., and BLUME, Cheryl, Schlumberger, 4900 California Ave, Suite 401A, Bakersfield, CA 93309
The Miocene age Monterey formation of coastal California is a prolific
producer from extensive
fracture
systems. These zones were originally bypassed
because there was no effective way to detect and evaluate fractured reservoirs.
Modern day characterizations attempt to define spatial distributions to predict
intersections of
fracture
sweet spots with oil columns in the reservoir.
Fracture
orientation and density are robustly defined by resistivity imaging
methods. Detailed
fracture
identification and classification analyses provide
reduction of
fracture
images to 1 or 2 dimensional vectors for inclusion in
reservoir models. Relationships between faulting / folding and fracturing can
also be observed with this methodology. Interval testing has been employed to
identify the fluid content, permeability, and skin damage within fractured
zones. Inflatable packers on a modular dynamics test tool, deployed with
drillpipe conveyed logging techniques, have been used to evaluate intervals
selected from the image logs. Dipole sonic data has been utilized to examine the
anisotropy found in fractured and faulted zones. Low frequency sonic
analysis
has been used to evaluate relative permeability in fractured zones. Combining
these methodologies provides for an understanding of the Monterey
fracture
systems previously not possible. Enhanced reservoir exploitation is the result.