SEISMIC EXPRESSION OF ABNORMAL GEO-PRESSURE IN THE BARROW SUB-BASIN

2002 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 547
Author(s):  
M. Urosevic ◽  
Li-Yun Fu ◽  
K.J. Dodds

Drilling uncertainties related to abnormal geopressure are common in the Barrow and Dampier Sub-basins of the North West Shelf. These uncertainties contribute to increased drilling risk and costs. There have been a number of published studies in this area which have been directed towards understanding the mechanisms and modelling of the expected pressures. These studies, however, have been in general isolated and have concentrated on non-seismic related methods. This paper provides an empirical analysis of the seismic response in an area with known variation of overpressure, and critically is integrated with a comprehensive research effort looking at aspects of overpressure from a laboratory, empirical and theoretical perspective.The study was conducted using data taken from permit WA-25-P (P25) in the Barrow Sub-basin. These data included 3D surface seismic and VSP, well logs, mud weight and pressure data from the wells. The results of a mineralogical analysis conducted on core samples and basin-wide geological modelling studies were also incorporated into the study. The Muderong Shale, which comprises the principal seal in the area and is believed to be overpressured was selected as the prime target for the analysis. Initially we assess the potential of existing methods, such as velocitybased methods, for remote prediction of excessive pore pressure in the area P25. This is extended to amplitude related effects involving an analysis of reflectivity in the presence of a velocity transition zone over the overpressured interval. Finally the relationship of well data, VSP and surface seismic derived attributes is described.The available data in the P25 area was sparse and consequently we could not rely on statistical based associations. Current industry methods that rely on a limited number of calibration points suggest that the application of either velocity or AVO based methods may produce unreliable predictions of pore pressure. Ambiguities in inferring overpressure introduced by a variable mineral composition of shales and the presence of a strong velocity gradient, which distorts the wave shape, reduces the reliability of these methods.A detailed analysis using VSP data acquired in a highly overpressured well was found to be crucial for understanding the response of various seismic attributes to changes in effective stress. This enabled us to propose a new qualitative, but efficient approach for remote prediction of overpressure, particularly suited for underexplored areas such as P25. The applicability of the method, which uses single and combined seismic sequence and trace multi-attributes to predict overpressured zones, is demonstrated with the Venture-Carey 3D data recorded in the Barrow Sub-basin.

1999 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 87
Author(s):  
D.R. Kingsley ◽  
L.A. Tilbury

Application of 3D technology and the strategy of acquiring 'wall-to-wall' 3D data over WA-28-P and the associated production licences has had a major impact on the exploration and appraisal success of the North West Shelf Venture.The different aspects of 3D technology have contributed to this success to varying degrees according to the geological setting of the prospects and fields. In general, all have benefited from improved structural definition, better stratigraphic/reservoir definition, improved depth conversion and the spatial continuity of data inherent in 3D datasets.Noteable discoveries attributable to 3D technology include North Rankin West (NRA–22), Perseus–1 (and appraisals Perseus–2, –3A, Perseus South–1), Capella–1, Sculptor–1, Hermes (Lambert–2), Keast–1, Dockrell–2, and appraisal wells Yodel–2, Egret–2 and Lambert–4. Despite this outstanding success, several noteable dry wells, including West Dixon–1 (Triassic), Spica–1, Malmsey–1 and Wanaea–5 (appraisal), have been drilled.The continuing application of 3D technology, although in an increasingly mature area where more subtle and higher risk traps will be the norm, is expected to maintain a high success rate for the North West Shelf Venture.


Author(s):  
A. J. Southward

The inshore fishery for the pilchard in Cornish waters has existed for several hundred years, and such records as are available concerning fluctuation in catches and market conditions have been reviewed by Couch (1865), Cushing (1957) and Culley (1971). Although pilchard have been landed from Lyme Bay, from the eastern half of the Channel, and from the southern North Sea (Couch, 1865; Furnestin, 1945; Cushing, 1957; personal communications G. T. Boalch) the catches have usually been incidental to other fisheries and more sporadic than in Cornish waters. Traditionally there are three areas fished for the Cornish pilchard: on the north-west coast around St Ives; in Mounts Bay and towards the Scillies; and between the Lizard Pt and Bolt Tail in Devon (Couch, 1865; Culley, 1971). The latter region, constituting the inshore waters of south-east Cornwall and south Devon, effectively forms the eastern limits of the regular occurrence of commercial shoals. Knowledge of the breeding and life-history of the fish in this region has always been scarce and subject to much hearsay evidence (reviewed in Southward, 1963). Up to quite recently it was thought that the main spawning area lay well to the west of the entrance to the Channel, and it was not until the investigations reported by Corbin (1947,195°) a nd Cushing (1957)tnat it was conclusively shown that extensive spawning can occur within the English Channel from May to October. The relationship of the spawning in the western Channel to the other areas of spawning off the entrance to the Channel and in the northern Bay of Biscay is illustrated in a recent series of reports (Arbault & Boutin, 1968; Arbault & Lacroix-Boutin, 1969; Arbault & Lacroix, 1971; Wallace, P. D. & Pleasants, C. A., duplicated ICES meeting paper CM 1972/J: 8), and is further demonstrated by Demir & Southward (1974) in discussing the results of a study of small scale seasonal changes in spawning intensity in inshore waters.


2002 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 74-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Dopazo ◽  
M.a J. Aira ◽  
M. Armisén ◽  
C. Vidal

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. T523-T530
Author(s):  
Ehsan Zabihi Naeini ◽  
Mark Sams

Broadband reprocessed seismic data from the North West Shelf of Australia were inverted using wavelets estimated with a conventional approach. The inversion method applied was a facies-based inversion, in which the low-frequency model is a product of the inversion process itself, constrained by facies-dependent input trends, the resultant facies distribution, and the match to the seismic. The results identified the presence of a gas reservoir that had recently been confirmed through drilling. The reservoir is thin, with up to 15 ms of maximum thickness. The bandwidth of the seismic data is approximately 5–70 Hz, and the well data used to extract the wavelet used in the inversion are only 400 ms long. As such, there was little control on the lowest frequencies of the wavelet. Different wavelets were subsequently estimated using a variety of new techniques that attempt to address the limitations of short well-log segments and low-frequency seismic. The revised inversion showed greater gas-sand continuity and an extension of the reservoir at one flank. Noise-free synthetic examples indicate that thin-bed delineation can depend on the accuracy of the low-frequency content of the wavelets used for inversion. Underestimation of the low-frequency contents can result in missing thin beds, whereas underestimation of high frequencies can introduce false thin beds. Therefore, it is very important to correctly capture the full frequency content of the seismic data in terms of the amplitude and phase spectra of the estimated wavelets, which subsequently leads to a more accurate thin-bed reservoir characterization through inversion.


2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
G. B. Purushottama ◽  
Thakurdas . ◽  
V. Ramasubramanian ◽  
Gnyanaranjan Dash ◽  
K. V. Akhilesh ◽  
...  

Information on reproductive biology is presented for the grey sharpnose shark Rhizoprionodon oligolinx Springer, 1964 (Chondrichthyes: Carcharhiniformes), collected off the north-west coast of India in the Arabian Sea. A total of 711 individuals, of 27.0 to 93.0 cm total length (TL), 180 to 2600 g total weight (TW) were used for the study. The lengthweight relationships were significantly different between the sexes. The size-at  maturity (Lm50) for females and males was estimated to be 62.3 and 59.5 cm TL respectively. Number of embryos ranged from 1 to 7 and the size at birth was estimated between 25 to 30 cm TL. Overall sex ratio favoured the females slightly at the rate of 1.27:1. There was significant positive correlation between maternal TL and number of embryos (p<0.001). Dietary analysis of stomach contents (%IRI) revealed that R. oligolinx feeds primarily on teleosts (95.5%), cephalopods (3.2%) and crustaceans (1.2%). This study presents the first detailed biological observation on size, sex composition, size-at-maturity (Lm50) and length-weight relationship of R. oligolinx from the northern Arabian Sea.


2005 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 407 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Edwards ◽  
J. Crosby ◽  
N. David ◽  
C. Loader ◽  
S. Westlake

In a maturing province such as the North West Shelf, it is time-critical to find remaining hydrocarbon resources as well as to develop small finds before existing big field installations and their associated infrastructure are decommissioned. Finding the remaining smaller fields with subtle geophysical expression is a challenge, and a thorough understanding of the petroleum geology is essential. To achieve this, the subsurface structure and depositional systems must be understood in a regional as well as a local context.To date, exploration companies’ regional models have been based on a mixture of 2D and 3D seismic of varying vintages, orientations, and quality. Consequently they have been incomplete and lacking detail. To address this problem, PGS initiated the MegaSurvey Project, merging a number of 3D surveys into large, consistent 3D data sets. For the first time, the regional picture and prospect-size detail are both available from a single dataset.Two MegaSurveys for the North West Shelf are now available; the Vulcan Sub-Basin MegaSurvey (VMS) and the Carnarvon MegaSurvey (CMS).The MegaSurvey seismic data and consistent horizon interpretation (tied to released well control) enables asset- focussed oil companies to concentrate on the more detailed search-for-the-subtle-trap to find, understand, and develop remaining reserves. Interpretation of the first MegaSurvey (Vulcan Sub-Basin) was completed in 2004 and work is focussed on the Carnarvon MegaSurvey, the interpretation of which will be completed in March 2005.The PGS 3D MegaSurveys allow visualisation of the subsurface both on a scale and resolution that has hitherto been unavailable. They provide an essential new tool to help fully unlock the remaining potential of the North West Shelf.


Author(s):  
DAVID BRAUND

This chapter discusses the ethnic, religious, economic and political interactions of Olbia with other communities during the 600–100 century BC. It focuses on the various relationship of the Greater Olbia with both Greeks and non-Greeks. Greater Olbia pertains to Olbia's mini-empire in the northwest Black Sea and spans across the estuary of the lower Bug, the lower Dnieper, the north-west Crimea, the outer estuary of Dnepier or Hylaea, the Berezan, the island of Lueke, and the settlements along Dniester. Greater Olbia was largely dependent on the maintenance of broadly symbiotic relationships with non-Greeks. These relationships and interactions with other non-Greek communities are reflected in the existence of a rich mix of traditional Greek and barbarian names in the personal names of Greeks. However distinct and Greek the Olbiopolitans may have perceived themselves, they were subjected to extensive cultural osmosis between Greeks and non-Greeks in and around the city. This osmosis and symbiosis can be seen in the religion, the pottery, the names and other aspects of the Olbiopolitan living such as the observation of Dio Chrysostom where he made note of a young Olbiopolitan cavalryman in a garb of a barbarian yet with his head full of Achilles.


Author(s):  
Steven Riley ◽  
Kylie E. C. Ainslie ◽  
Oliver Eales ◽  
Caroline E. Walters ◽  
Haowei Wang ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundREACT-1 is a community survey of PCR confirmed swab-positivity for SARS-CoV-2 among random samples of the population in England. This interim report includes data from the fifth round of data collection currently underway for swabs sampled from the 18th to 26th September 2020.MethodsRepeated cross-sectional surveys of random samples of the population aged 5 years and over in England with sample size ranging from 120,000 to 160,000 people in each round of data collection. Collection of self-administered nose and throat swab for PCR and questionnaire data. Prevalence of swab-positivity by round and by demographic variables including age, sex, region, ethnicity. Estimation of reproduction number (R) between and within rounds, and time trends using exponential growth or decay model. Assessment of geographical clustering based on boundary-free spatial model.ResultsOver the 9 days for which data are available, we find 363 positives from 84,610 samples giving a weighted prevalence to date of 0.55% (0.47%, 0.64%) in round 5. This implies that 411,000 (351,000, 478,000) people in England are virus-positive under the assumption that the swab assay is 75% sensitive. Using data from the most recent two rounds, we estimate a doubling time of 10.6 (9.4, 12.0) days covering the period 20th August to 26th September, corresponding to a reproduction number R of 1.47 (1.40, 1.53). Using data only from round 5 we estimate a reproduction number of 1.06 (0.74, 1.46) with probability of 63% that R is greater than 1. Between rounds 4 and 5 there was a marked increase in unweighted prevalence at all ages. In the most recent data, prevalence was highest in the 18 to 24 yrs age group at 0.96% (0.68%, 1.36%). At 65+ yrs prevalence increased ∼7-fold between rounds 4 and 5 from 0.04% (0.03%, 0.07%) to 0.29% (0.23%, 0.37%). Prevalence increased in all regions between rounds 4 and 5, giving the highest unweighted prevalence in round 5 in the North West at 0.86% (0.69%, 1.06%). In London, prevalence increased ∼5-fold from 0.10% (0.06%, 0.17%) to 0.49% (0.36%, 0.68%). Regional R values ranged from 1.32 (1.16,1.50) in Yorkshire and the Humber to 1.63 (1.42, 1.88) in the East Midlands over the same period. In the most recent data, there was extensive clustering in the North West, Midlands and in and around London with pockets of clustering in other regions including the South West, North East and East of England. Odds of swab-positivity were ∼2-fold higher in people of Asian and Black ethnicity compared with white participants.ConclusionRapid growth has led to high prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 virus in England among all regions and age groups, including those age groups at highest risk. Although there is evidence of a recent deceleration in the epidemic, current levels of prevalence will inevitably result in additional hospitalisations and mortality in coming weeks. A re-doubling of public health efforts is needed to return to a declining phase of the epidemic.


2011 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 681
Author(s):  
Frank Glass ◽  
Stephan Gelinsky ◽  
Irene Espejo ◽  
Teresa Santana ◽  
Gareth Yardley

Shell Development Australia is a major asset holder in the Browse Basin and the Carnarvon Basin in the North West Shelf of Australia. In 2007, Shell Development Australia embarked on an integrated quantitative seismic interpretation project related to the Triassic Mungaroo Formation in the Carnarvon Basin. The main objective was to constrain the uncertainties in using seismic data as a predictor for rock and fluid properties of fields and prospects in the basin. This project followed a workflow that has been proven in other basins around the world, whereby the vertical and lateral variability of rock properties of both reservoir and non-reservoir lithologies are captured in general trends. The calculated trends are based on well log extractions of end member lithologies and the input of petrographic information and forward modelling. In combination with a regionally consistent 3D burial model for the estimation of remaining porosity, these established rock trends then allow for a prediction of various acoustic responses of reservoir and pore fill properties. The comparisons between the pre-drill predicted rock properties and the properties encountered after drilling at different reservoir levels have lead to a general confidence that the reservoir properties can be derived from seismic data where well data are not abundant. This increased confidence will play a major part in Shell’s attitude towards appraisal activities and decisions on various development options.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document