--> Constraining Geostatistical Reservoir Models with Seismic Attributes
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Constraining Geostatistical Reservoir Models with Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Attributes

By

Richard L. ChambersPrevious Hit1Next Hit, Jeffrey M. Yarus2

(Previous Hit1Next Hit) Quantitative Geosciences, Inc, Broken Arrow, OK (2) Quantitative Geosciences, Inc, Houston, TX

 Complex Previous HitseismicNext Hit trace analysis appeared with the advent of Previous HitseismicNext Hit sequence stratigraphy in the mid 1970s. Vail and his colleagues expected that Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes would eventually quantify their Previous HitseismicNext Hit facies parameters. Since then we have seen a proliferation in the number (hundreds) and often times an inappropriate use of Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes for reservoir characterization. Efforts to understand the meaning of the plethora of Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes include the use of linear and non-linear techniques, such as Fourier spectral analysis, Principle Components, Discriminate Function, neural networks, and others. The idea was that perhaps combinations of attributes might make sense when individually the attributes lacked clear geological significance, except that they revealed some sort of pattern. Most of the attributes are highly correlated simply because they are derivatives of one another and there is no guarantee that their correlation with a reservoir property is meaningful. Great care must be taken when choosing Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes, because it is not unusual to find spurious or false correlations that do not reflect any physical basis for the relationship and the probability of finding false correlations increases with the number of Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes considered and is inversely proportional to the number of data control points. It is time to return to “first principles” and establish a clear relationship between a reservoir attribute, be it facies, porosity, or lithology, for example, and a Previous HitseismicNext Hit attribute(s).

We illustrate the use of Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes following a four step procedure: Previous Hit1Next Hit) Calibration phase, 2.) Choice of the Previous HitseismicTop attribute, 3) Cross-validation, and 4) Prediction and Uncertainty Analysis using Collocated Cokriging and Collocated Cosimulation.