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GCWell Logs Invaluable to Interpreting Limited-Quality
Seismic
of Complex Structures*
Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article #40385 (2009)
Posted February 20, 2009
*Adapted
from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author, in AAPG Explorer, January, 2009, and entitled “Hey, Who Overturned This Strata”. 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])
The methodology described here may benefit those who are confronted with the problem
of interpreting complex structures from limited-quality
3-D
seismic
images. The objective of this study was to characterize deep (20,000 feet/6,000 meters)
Ellenburger gas reservoirs in West Texas. In addition to the Ellenburger reflection signals being weak because of the great depth of the target, the top
of the Ellenburger across the area was a gentle, ramp-like increase in impedance that did not produce a robust reflection event.
A further negative influence on
data
quality was that the area was covered by a
variable surface layer of low-velocity Tertiary fill that was underlain by a varying thickness of high-velocity salt/anhydrite. These complicated
near-surface conditions made static corrections of the
data
difficult; in fact, the combination of all of these factors has caused some explorationists to
consider the region to be a no-record
seismic
area for imaging deep drilling targets.
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Example
The
The overturned Simpson (Ordovician) section documented in study well 78 was particularly
important because of its impact on the position of targeted Ellenburger reservoirs in the
· The
interpreted top of the Simpson.
· The fold
axis about which beds are overturned within the Simpson section.
· The three arbitrary stratigraphic intervals (1, 2, 3) that emphasize the bedding
symmetry about the fold axis.
In this area the Ellenburger is dolomite, not limestone. Cross-plots of neutron and sonic porosities showed that the industry-provided top of Ellenburger was a limestone facies, which led to the conclusion that the unit was incorrectly identified as top of Ellenburger. This conclusion then led to the recognition that overturned bedding was present in the log responses.
Note that the log
Figure 3 shows a vertical section from the Conclusion
The principal point is that although overturned strata cannot be interpreted from this limited-quality
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