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GCPredicting
Reservoir
Properties
from 3-D Seismic Attributes with Little Well Control –
Jurassic Smackover Formation*
By
Bruce S. Hart1
Search and Discovery Article #40046 (2002)
*Adapted for
online presentation from an article by the same author in AAPG Explorer
(April, 1999), entitled “3-D Can Provide
Reservoir
Data.” Appreciation is
expressed to the author and to M. Ray Thomasson, former Chairman of the AAPG
Geophysical Integration Committee, and Larry Nation, AAPG Communications
Director, for their support of this online version.
1McGill
University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada ([email protected]).
Co-author is Bob Balch,
Petroleum
Recovery Research Center.
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Click here for sequence of Figure 2a, 2b, 2c.
There is an increasing interest in the use of
attributes derived from 3-D seismic data to define
Explosive growth in interest in this approach
has led to a proliferation of methods for refining it. Multiple
regression, geostatistics, neural networks and other approaches are
being explored to help correlate log and seismic data, and then to
distribute
Using a procedure known as exclusion testing,
the interpretation team will use only a subset of the well database
during the project’s correlation phase, then test the physical
A two-pronged methodology for assessing the
results of a seismic-guided physical-
This approach is illustrated herein with an example from the Jurassic Smackover Formation. Testing the ModelAppleton Field is a small field (840 aces, 13 wells, of which four were producing in 1997) in southwestern Alabama (Figure 1). Unlike other Smackover fields, where high energy shoal carbonates are the primary productive intervals in the formation, here the best production is from a dolomitized algal buildup that developed over a paleobasement high located landward of the Jurassic shelf margin. True vertical depth to the top of the formation in the Appleton generally exceeds 3,800 meters (12,500 feet), and most wells are deviated, to variable extents. The data set for this project consisted of wireline log information from 10 wells (deemed to be too few for exclusion testing), production data and a 3-D seismic survey. The links between geology and seismic response were evaluated by creating simple 2-D seismic models. The modeling began with the construction of geologic models (e.g., Fig. 2a) that were convolved with a wavelet (chosen to match the frequency and phase characteristics of the data) to generate 2-D synthetic seismic transects (Fig. 2b). The model results showed that:
Comparison of the model results to corresponding transects through the seismic data (Fig. 2c; note that the model result is noise free, whereas the data are somewhat noisy) allowed the horizons of importance to be identified and mapped in the 3-D volume. Structure maps derived from the 3-D data showed undrilled structural culminations that were not apparent in previously published maps. If these structures are porous, they could be infill targets since existing wells would leave attic oil.
An empirical relationship was then sought
between seismic attributes and log
Values for these three attributes – for the entire 3-D survey area – were then input into the empirically derived regression expression to generate a map of the thickness of the porosity zone at the Appleton Field (Figure 3). The results suggested that porosity is well developed beneath the structural culminations. Results
To help assess the validity of this
prediction, one of the initial 2-D seismic models was refined, and the
results were exported to a seismic interpretation package. From the
model results, it was possible to derive the same seismic attributes
that had been used in the physical Next, the porosity zone thickness map was compared to what is known about the field’s geology. The best – and thickest – porosity zones in the Appleton Field are considered to be developed in algal boundstones on the crest of the paleostructure, where our seismic predictions indicated. Other porosity predicted to be present on the seaward flank of the buildups might be explained as reef-front talus accumulations. Despite the porosity in the reef-front areas, they are located below the oil water contact (as derived from well control), and apparently lack updip closure.
A well drilled following this study (Figure
3) encountered 21 meters (69 feet) of porosity greater than 12 percent
at a location where the predicted thickness of this zone was 19 meters
(62 feet). The well tested 136 BOPD. This result is considered to be a
successful test of the physical
Neither the seismic modeling component nor the geologic “reality check”
of this program is intrinsically new. The potential exists, however, for
these methods to be underutilized during field development, since so
much effort is focused on the process’ mathematical (statistical)
aspects. Although ideally all components of the process (statistics,
geology and geophysics) will be satisfied during an attribute-based
characterization program, risk can be reduced (not eliminated) where
limited well control exists through forward modeling and integration of
the geology. No matter how mathematically rigorous a physical |
