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GC3-D
Seismic Data in Imaging Fracture
Properties
for
Reservoir
Development*
By
Bob Parney1 and Paul LaPointe2
Search and Discovery Article #40098 (2003)
*Adapted for online presentation from the Geophysical Corner column in AAPG Explorer October and November, 2002, entitled “Fractures Can Come Into Focus”and “Simple Seismic, Complex Fractures,” respectively, and prepared by the authors. Appreciation is expressed to the authors, to R. Randy Ray, Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical Integration Committee, and to Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1Axis Geophysics, Denver, Colorado ([email protected])
2Golder Associates, Redmond, Washington ([email protected])
It has long been recognized that the presence of
naturally occurring fracture networks can lead to unpredictable heterogeneity
within many reservoirs. Conversely, fractures provide high permeability pathways
that can be exploited to extract reserves stored in otherwise low permeability
matrix rock. One of the primary difficulties in managing fracture heterogeneity
and the consequent uncertainty is that production rates and volumes are
controlled by fracture network connectivity between the producing wells, while
the primary sources of data on fracture
properties
are measured only in the
vicinity of wells. In some ways this is like trying to predict the size of a
schoolyard by close examination of a single link in the surrounding fence.
Recent advances in the processing of 3-D seismic data,
however, are providing valuable new tools for the imaging of fracture
properties
between wells. Those tools are the analysis of seismic velocities as affected by
raypath direction and offset distance. Specifically, adjusting velocities as a
function of azimuth (velocity anisotropy) to improve reflection imaging has
produced by-product data volumes of seismic velocity anisotropy (ANMO) and
improved data volumes of azimuthal changes in amplitude as a function of offset
(AVAZ).
These seismic advances raise the following questions:
-
How do fractures influence these data?
-
Geologically, what should this newly imageable level of fracture heterogeneity look like?
-
How do we then make the link between fracture
properties
and
reservoir
performance?
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uTheory of seismic response to fractures uFracture orientation in Rocky Mountains
uInterpreting
multiple fracture set
uTheory of seismic response to fractures uFracture orientation in Rocky Mountains
uInterpreting
multiple fracture set
uTheory of seismic response to fractures uFracture orientation in Rocky Mountains
uInterpreting
multiple fracture set
uTheory of seismic response to fractures uFracture orientation in Rocky Mountains
uInterpreting
multiple fracture set
uTheory of seismic response to fractures uFracture orientation in Rocky Mountains
uInterpreting
multiple fracture set
uTheory of seismic response to fractures uFracture orientation in Rocky Mountains
uInterpreting
multiple fracture set
|
Theory of Seismic Response To Fractures
The underlying theory behind the ANMO and AVAZ
processing is quite simple: Most geophysical processing algorithms
assume that all fractures are approximately vertical, and are locally
oriented in a single dominant direction (Figure 1). The maximum
detectable seismic effect is when the seismic raypath travels
perpendicular to the open fractures, crossing the slow velocity,
possibly The difference between the maximum and minimum effect gives some measure of the fracture intensity. This same process can be applied in a number of data volumes where the change in Vp or Vs as a function of azimuth is measured by the change in stacking velocities (azimuthal NMO) or the change in reflection coefficients (azimuthal AVO).
Fracture Orientation in Rocky MountainsA critical feature of recently processed AVAZ and ANMO data volumes has been that the dominant fracture orientation can change dramatically over short distances. Recent work on a project sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy (www.fracturedreservoirs.com) shows that these changes are not only possible, but also highly likely in a Rocky Mountain compressional setting where the stress field is complex. The Circle Ridge Field, in Wyoming’s Wind River Reservation, Wind River Basin (Figure 2), was characterized through a combination of 2-D cross-sections and 3-D structural reconstructions based on well and surface data, and fracture data from surface outcrops and subsurface image logs. The fracture and structural data were supplemented with data from several transient well tests, a bromide tracer test and a nitrogen injection test.
The structure is primarily determined by NE-SW
compression, which caused the formation of a series of imbricate fault
blocks along the Red Gully Fault, including several imbricates to the
north (Figure 3). The entire structure has been characterized as a
fault-breached, fault-propagation fold. Development of the structure is
likely to have produced the fracturing within the
Figure 4 shows differences in extensional
strain magnitude and orientation throughout a block of the Tensleep
Formation in the hanging wall of the field’s Red Gully Fault. The
contours and line lengths represent the magnitude of the maximum
extensional strain due to the initial folding of the Ninety-degree changes in dominant fracture orientation across fracture fairways seen in Figure 4 are consistent with orientation patterns predicted by AVAZ data in nearby reservoirs. These orientation variations arise due to inhomogeneities in the stress field and the resulting fracture networks are consistent with well image log and tracer data. Similar changes in fracture orientation occur in nearby outcrop at a much smaller scale (Figure 5). The black fractures occur only on the left portion of the outcrop, nowhere else. Red fractures dominate over blue fractures in the left portion, while blue fracture intensity increases markedly on the right hand side. Since seismic anisotropy can be influenced by the presence of natural fractures – and that a high degree of variability in fracture orientation and intensity is to be expected in a Rocky Mountain compressional setting – interpretation of seismic data requires a sound link with knowledge of the fracture geology in a region.
Interpreting
Multiple Fracture Set
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