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Oil Sands Reservoir Characterization: A Case Study at Nexen/Opti Long Lake*
By
Laurie Weston Bellman1
Search and Discovery Article #40276 (2008)
Posted March 10, 2008
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for AAPG Hedberg Conference, “Heavy Oil and Bitumen in Foreland Basins – From Processes to Products,” September 30 - October 3, 2007 – Banff, Alberta, Canada
1Bellman Consulting Ltd., Calgary, Alberta (contracted to Nexen Inc.) ([email protected])
The Athabasca oil sands contain more than a trillion barrels of oil within the Cretaceous McMurray Formation of northeastern Alberta. The McMurray Formation is generally considered to be a compound estuarine valley system characterized by multiple cuts and fills. It is bounded below by Devonian rocks at the pre-Cretaceous unconformity and above by the widespread transgressive marine shales and sands of the Wabiscaw Formation. In the Long Lake area (Figure 1), it is 60 to 100 m thick, with net pays of greater than 40m. Still, its complexity is legendary. Stacked channel deposition exhibits a high degree of reservoir variability both vertically and laterally making lithological predictability difficult.
Traditionally, at least 8 and often many more vertical wells per square mile are drilled and cored to obtain enough data to be confident in defining a Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) project area. For more details, visit http://www.nexeninc.com. Even then, significant variations occur between wells. 3D seismic data has been used successfully in the past mainly to define the base of the zone of interest (there is a strong reflector at the Cretaceous-Devonian boundary), and the gross thickness of the interval. Various attempts have been made to decipher the internal composition of the channeled interval with limited success.
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In this article, I describe the method, application, and results of
a technique of quantitatively extracting and classifying elastic
rock
Wireline logs directly (or indirectly) measure P-wave velocity,
S-wave velocity and density. Integrating this data with core and log
analysis, the lambda and mu Applying this technique over a project area allows more confident mapping of the channels and the reservoir quality and continuity within the channels. A few of the potential benefits in oil sands areas include fewer vertical wells required to define the resource area and more confidently placed horizontal wells for optimal production.
The cores shown represent facies types that cluster on a lambda*rho
– mu*rho cross plot. The 5-13 well facies are typical for the oil
sands area, with the clean sands and shales nicely separated on the
cross plot (Figure 4a and 4b). The 7-16
core is interesting because it is almost all mud and at first
glance, appears to be an abandoned channel 30m thick. However, when
the lambda*rho – mu*rho points are plotted on the cross plot, they
are all in the ‘non-reservoir’ part of the plot, but they fall into
two distinct clusters (Figure 5a). If
the points in the clusters are highlighted in different colors and
identified in depth (Figure 5b), it is
apparent that the middle portion of the mud has different
Barson, D., Bachu, S., Esslinger, P., 2001, Flow systems in the Mannville Group in the east-central Athabasca area and implications for steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) operations for in situ bitumen production: Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, v. 49, p. 376-392. Dumitrescu, C., Weston Bellman, L., and Williams, A., 2005, Delineating productive reservoir in the Canadian oil sands using neural networks approach: CSEG Technical Abstracts. Goodway, W., Chen, T., and Downton, J., 1997, Improved AVO fluid detection and lithology discrimination using Lame petrophysical parameters: “Lambda*rho”, “mu*rho” and “lambda/mu fluid stack”, from P and S inversions: 67th Annual International Meeting., SEG Expanded Abstracts, p183-186.
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