--> An Integrated Approach to Geophysics and Near Surface Geology in Southern Tunisia Using GIS Techniques
[First Hit]

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

An Integrated Approach to Geophysics and Near Surface Geology in Southern Tunisia Using GIS Techniques

By

 Simon J Robinson1, Jock M Drummond2

(1) Anadarko International New Ventures, Uxbridge, United Kingdom (2) Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, The Woodlands, TX

 Geographic Information System (GIS) technologies provide exploration teams with excellent tools with which to combine many disparate types of Previous HitdataNext Hit into an integrated subsurface Previous HitinterpretationNext Hit.

We demonstrate how Anadarko has used GIS to merge the diversity of exploration Previous HitdataNext Hit collected over the last thirty years in southern Tunisia.

In creating a large, evolving database of remote sensing, geophysical, geological, geochemical and engineering Previous HitdataNext Hit, the database itself became the primary Previous HitdataNext Hit management and archival tool.

GIS works as a Previous HitdataNext Hit manipulator and spatial analysis tool, by which geographic patterns and relationships between features can be quickly ascertained from very large Previous HitdataNext Hit sets in a wide variety of formats.

Roads, pipelines, well pads and old seismic lines identified on satellite imagery were resurveyed. Digital elevation models were used to check elevations against old survey Previous HitdataNext Hit. Combined spatial analysis of Previous HitrefractionNext Hit statics attributes and high-resolution aeromagnetics was used to optimally position new seismic lines. Seismic recording and positioning attributes, correlated against terrain and outcrop geology, were used to select survey parameters.

Stratigraphy and surface structure were mapped from outcrop with the assistance of geological Previous HitinterpretationNext Hit of satellite imagery. Geologists updated their Previous HitinterpretationNext Hit directly into the database on computers in the field.

The interactivity of GIS, the volume of Previous HitdataNext Hit available and the spatial analysis tools facilitated far better integration of geophysics and near surface geology than was practical in the past. Such integration was paramount in the Previous HitinterpretationTop of the subtle geological structures and defining the optimal drilling locations.