Seismic
Exploration for Fractured Lower Dakota Alluvial Gas Sands, San Juan Basin, New Mexico
Reeves, James J. and W. Hoxie Smith
GeoSpectrum, Inc, Midland, TX
Reservoir fractures are predicted using multiple azimuth
seismic
lineament mapping in the Lower Dakota reservoir section. A
seismic
lineament is defined as a linear feature seen in a time slice or horizon slice through the
seismic
volume. For lineament mapping, each lineament must be recognizable in more than one
seismic
attribute
volume.
Seismic
attributes investigated include: coherency, amplitude, frequency, phase, and acoustic impedance. We interpret that areas having high
seismic
lineament density with multi-directional lineaments are associated with high fracture density in the reservoir.
Lead areas defined by regions of “swarming” multi-directional lineaments are further screened by additional geologic attributes. These attributes include reservoir isopach thickness, indicating thicker reservoir section;
seismic
horizon slices, imaging potentially productive reservoir stratigraphy; and a collocated cokriged clay volume
map
for the reservoir zone computed from near trace
seismic
amplitude (an AVO
attribute
) and a comprehensive petrophysical analysis of the well data to determine discrete values of clay volume at each well. This
map
indicates where good/clean reservoir rock is located. We interpret that clean/low clay reservoir rock is brittle and likely to be highly fractured when
seismic
lineaments are present.
A gas sensitive AVO
seismic
attribute
, near trace stacked phase minus far trace stacked phase, phase gradient, is used to further define drill locations having potential high gas saturation. The importance of this
attribute
cannot be understated, as reservoir fractures enhance reservoir permeability and volume, they may also penetrate water saturated zones in the Dakota and/or Morrison intervals and be responsible for the reservoir being water saturated and ruined.
Seismic
interval velocity anisotropy is used to investigate reservoir potential in tight sands of the Upper Dakota up hole from the main reservoir target. We interpret that large interval velocity anisotropy is associated with fracture related anisotropy in these tight sands.
