Use of seismic stratigraphy for Minnelusa exploration, northeastern Wyoming

Geophysics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 715-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reverend Francis D. Raffalovich ◽  
Terrell B. Daw

While Minnelusa sands have yielded significant reserves in Wyoming’s Powder River Basin, geologic complexities have made these sands an elusive target. This paper briefly describes the development of a technique which was used successfully in the exploration of Minnelusa sands. This tehnique can be applied to many stratigraphic exploration programs. Sonic logs, which are key logs in defining Minnelusa sands, in the C-H field were used to construct synthetic seismograms. These synthetics were then organized in cross‐section form to define whether a change in Minnelusa sands would yield an identifiable change on the synthetics. The “idealized” seismic response did show an obvious lateral change from upper sand to no upper sand conditions, and a pilot seismic line was shot using a Vibroseis® source. This line, which was shot through the C-H field, successfully showed the updip limits of the upper Minnelusa sands. A subsequent seismic program was acquired and other leads and prospects were identified, including prospects that were drilled and successfully completed in the Rozet area. However, a number of other wells conformed to Murphy’s law. In addition to standard processing techniques, high‐resolution processing and seismic attribute processing was done on some of the seismic data, yielding differing degrees of success. By closely coordinating geologic and geophysical principles, a useful stratigraphic‐seismic methodology was developed which has application to a wide variety of exploration problems. ™Trade and service mark of Conoco Inc.

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 6036
Author(s):  
Anna Łaba-Biel ◽  
Anna Kwietniak ◽  
Andrzej Urbaniec

An integrated geological and geophysical approach is presented for the recognition of unconventional targets in the Miocene formations of the Carpathian Foredeep, southern Poland. The subject of the analysis is an unconventional reservoir built of interlayered packets of sandstone, mudstone and claystone, called a “heterogeneous sequence”. This type of sequence acts as both a reservoir and as source rock for hydrocarbons and it consists of layers of insignificant thickness, below the resolution of seismic data. The interpretation of such a sequence has rarely been based on seismic stratigraphy analysis; however, such an approach is proposed here. The subject of interpretation is high-quality seismic data of high resolution that enable detailed depositional analysis. The reconstruction of the depositional history was possible due to the analysis of flattened chronostratigraphic horizons (Wheeler diagram). The identification of depositional positions in a sedimentary basin was the first step for the indication of potential target areas. These areas were also subject to seismic attribute analysis (sweetness) and spectral decomposition. The seismic attribute results positively verified the previously proposed prospects. The results obtained demonstrate that the interpretation of the Miocene sediments in the Carpathian Foredeep should take into account the depositional history reconstruction and paleogeographical analysis.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 91
Author(s):  
Reni Agustiani ◽  
Puguh Hiskiawan ◽  
Rano Rano

It has been performed data interpretation of 3D seismic data and drilling field exploration wellsBasin Nova ScotiaKanada to know structure fault on the field Missisauga Formation. Seismic dataused is 601 inline, crossline 482, and the data used drilling wells are two wells which there is a loggamma ray, sonic logs and log RHOB. Interpretation is done the analysis of the map in thestructure of time and analysis of seismic attribute maps based on the geometrical attribute serves todetermine their structure or structural faults of the data volume 3D. Based on the time structuremap well known that first well is in the region heights and second wells is in low region. Based oninterpretation of the map attributes known three faults are two major fault and one minor fault.Two faults are in the East Sea drilling wells and a small fracture that was on its western side. Thethree fults are directed from Northwest to the Southeast. Fault is expected to serve as ahydrocarbon trap in the area that will be accumulated in drilling wells.Keywords: geometrical attribute, Seismic data, drilling wells, time structure map.


Geophysics ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 609-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bob A. Hardage ◽  
Randy L. Remington

A fundamental thesis of seismic stratigraphy is that seismic reflections follow impedance contrasts that coincide with stratal surfaces, which are surfaces where depositional processes occur at a fixed moment in geologic time. This stratal‐surface concept is used in this paper to image a narrow (width ∼300 ft or 90 m), thin, fluvial channel system that is embedded within a seismic reflection peak that reflects from a large (about 2 × 2 mi or 3.2 × 3.2 km) area of nonchannel facies that dominate the waveshape of the reflection peak. The targeted channel facies are confined to an interval that vertically spans less than 30 ft. According to principles of seismic stratigraphy, four conformable seismic stratal surfaces that pass through the interior of this channel sequence were constructed across a 2 × 2-mi (3.2 × 3.2-km) (approximately) area of a 3-D seismic‐data volume. The channel images portrayed on these seismic horizons, which were spaced at vertical increments of 2 ms, illustrate the principle that seismic attributes viewed on seismic stratal surfaces provide valuable images of facies distributions within thin‐bed sequences and help seismic interpreters segregate channel facies from nonchannel facies. These stratal‐surface interpretations of the fluvial system were then integrated to create a thin (8-ms-thick), stratal‐bounded seismic‐data window that spans the short geologic time period during which the targeted fluvial depositional system was active. Seismic‐attribute calculations within this stratal‐bounded analysis window improve parts of the channel image by integrating the facies information from all stratal surfaces into a unified seismic attribute that vertically spans the total depositional sequence. A comparison is made between channel images on seismic stratal surfaces that are conformable to two different reference surfaces, one reference surface being positioned below the targeted fluvial system and the second reference surface being above the thin‐bed channels. This comparison supports the premise that seismic interpreters should extrapolate stratal surfaces both upward and downward across a thin‐bed target to optimize the image of that target.


Geophysics ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 48 (6) ◽  
pp. 665-676 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis A. Cooke ◽  
William A. Schneider

Generalized linear inversion, sometimes known as model perturbation, nonlinear regression, or inverse modeling, is applied to synthetic and real seismic data sets with the objective of obtaining an impedance profile as a function of time. The impedances solved for are parameterized in a manner that describes the unknown earth using fewer variables than previous seismic generalized linear inversion techniques. In this application only single traces of common‐midpoint (CMP) processed data will be inverted. The method of generalized linear inversion (GLI) presented here is designed to improve on the shortcomings of recursive inversion with respect to relative and absolute scale of the impedance results, resolution of impedance boundaries, and distortion from residual wavelet effects. In obtaining these goals other advantageous aspects of GLI were discovered. For example, it is insensitive to noise in many cases, and it will allow an interpreter to fix the impedance of any number of known lithologies in an interval being inverted. This last property is extremely useful when evaluating a prospect on an otherwise well‐understood seismic line. The GLI method is illustrated on a number of synthetic examples and one field data set from the Powder River basin of Wyoming.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luiz Eduardo Soares Ferreira ◽  
Milton José Porsani ◽  
Michelângelo G. Da Silva ◽  
Giovani Lopes Vasconcelos

ABSTRACT. Seismic processing aims to provide an adequate image of the subsurface geology. During seismic processing, the filtering of signals considered noise is of utmost importance. Among these signals is the surface rolling noise, better known as ground-roll. Ground-roll occurs mainly in land seismic data, masking reflections, and this roll has the following main features: high amplitude, low frequency and low speed. The attenuation of this noise is generally performed through so-called conventional methods using 1-D or 2-D frequency filters in the fk domain. This study uses the empirical mode decomposition (EMD) method for ground-roll attenuation. The EMD method was implemented in the programming language FORTRAN 90 and applied in the time and frequency domains. The application of this method to the processing of land seismic line 204-RL-247 in Tacutu Basin resulted in stacked seismic sections that were of similar or sometimes better quality compared with those obtained using the fk and high-pass filtering methods.Keywords: seismic processing, empirical mode decomposition, seismic data filtering, ground-roll. RESUMO. O processamento sísmico tem como principal objetivo fornecer uma imagem adequada da geologia da subsuperfície. Nas etapas do processamento sísmico a filtragem de sinais considerados como ruídos é de fundamental importância. Dentre esses ruídos encontramos o ruído de rolamento superficial, mais conhecido como ground-roll . O ground-roll ocorre principalmente em dados sísmicos terrestres, mascarando as reflexões e possui como principais características: alta amplitude, baixa frequência e baixa velocidade. A atenuação desse ruído é geralmente realizada através de métodos de filtragem ditos convencionais, que utilizam filtros de frequência 1D ou filtro 2D no domínio fk. Este trabalho utiliza o método de Decomposição em Modos Empíricos (DME) para a atenuação do ground-roll. O método DME foi implementado em linguagem de programação FORTRAN 90, e foi aplicado no domínio do tempo e da frequência. Sua aplicação no processamento da linha sísmica terrestre 204-RL-247 da Bacia do Tacutu gerou como resultados, seções sísmicas empilhadas de qualidade semelhante e por vezes melhor, quando comparadas as obtidas com os métodos de filtragem fk e passa-alta.Palavras-chave: processamento sísmico, decomposição em modos empíricos, filtragem dados sísmicos, atenuação do ground-roll.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 219
Author(s):  
Jing Zeng ◽  
Alexey Stovas ◽  
Handong Huang ◽  
Lixia Ren ◽  
Tianlei Tang

Paleozoic marine shale gas resources in Southern China present broad prospects for exploration and development. However, previous research has mostly focused on the shale in the Sichuan Basin. The research target of this study is expanded to the Lower Silurian Longmaxi shale outside the Sichuan Basin. A prediction scheme of shale gas reservoirs through the frequency-dependent seismic attribute technology is developed to reduce drilling risks of shale gas related to complex geological structure and low exploration level. Extracting frequency-dependent seismic attribute is inseparable from spectral decomposition technology, whereby the matching pursuit algorithm is commonly used. However, frequency interference in MP results in an erroneous time-frequency (TF) spectrum and affects the accuracy of seismic attribute. Firstly, a novel spectral decomposition technology is proposed to minimize the effect of frequency interference by integrating the MP and the ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD). Synthetic and real data tests indicate that the proposed spectral decomposition technology provides a TF spectrum with higher accuracy and resolution than traditional MP. Then, a seismic fluid mobility attribute, extracted from the post-stack seismic data through the proposed spectral decomposition technology, is applied to characterize the shale reservoirs. The application result indicates that the seismic fluid mobility attribute can describe the spatial distribution of shale gas reservoirs well without well control. Based on the seismic fluid mobility attribute section, we have learned that the shale gas enrich areas are located near the bottom of the Longmaxi Formation. The inverted velocity data are also introduced to further verify the reliability of seismic fluid mobility. Finally, the thickness map of gas-bearing shale reservoirs in the Longmaxi Formation is obtained by combining the seismic fluid mobility attribute with the inverted velocity data, and two favorable exploration areas are suggested by analyzing the thickness, structure, and burial depth. The present work can not only be used to evaluate shale gas resources in the early stage of exploration, but also help to design the landing point and trajectory of directional drilling in the development stage.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. SB5-SB15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kurt J. Marfurt ◽  
Tiago M. Alves

Seismic attributes are routinely used to accelerate and quantify the interpretation of tectonic features in 3D seismic data. Coherence (or variance) cubes delineate the edges of megablocks and faulted strata, curvature delineates folds and flexures, while spectral components delineate lateral changes in thickness and lithology. Seismic attributes are at their best in extracting subtle and easy to overlook features on high-quality seismic data. However, seismic attributes can also exacerbate otherwise subtle effects such as acquisition footprint and velocity pull-up/push-down, as well as small processing and velocity errors in seismic imaging. As a result, the chance that an interpreter will suffer a pitfall is inversely proportional to his or her experience. Interpreters with a history of making conventional maps from vertical seismic sections will have previously encountered problems associated with acquisition, processing, and imaging. Because they know that attributes are a direct measure of the seismic amplitude data, they are not surprised that such attributes “accurately” represent these familiar errors. Less experienced interpreters may encounter these errors for the first time. Regardless of their level of experience, all interpreters are faced with increasingly larger seismic data volumes in which seismic attributes become valuable tools that aid in mapping and communicating geologic features of interest to their colleagues. In terms of attributes, structural pitfalls fall into two general categories: false structures due to seismic noise and processing errors including velocity pull-up/push-down due to lateral variations in the overburden and errors made in attribute computation by not accounting for structural dip. We evaluate these errors using 3D data volumes and find areas where present-day attributes do not provide the images we want.


2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 404-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Shuang Hu ◽  
Si Miao Zhu

A big tendency in oil industry is underestimating the heterogeneity of the reservoir and overestimating the connectivity, which results in overly optimistic estimates of the capacity. With the development of seismic attributes, we could pick up hidden reservoir lithology and physical property information from the actual seismic data, strengthen seismic data application in actual work, to ensure the objectivity of the results. In this paper, the channel sand body distribution in south eighth district of oilfield Saertu is predicted through seismic data root-mean-square amplitude and frequency division to identify sand body boundaries, predict the distribution area channel sand body characteristics successfully, which consistent with the sedimentary facies distribution. The result proves that seismic attribute analysis has good practicability in channel sand body prediction and sedimentary facies description.


Author(s):  
Oluwatoyin Khadijat Olaleye ◽  
Pius Adekunle Enikanselu ◽  
Michael Ayuk Ayuk

AbstractHydrocarbon accumulation and production within the Niger Delta Basin are controlled by varieties of geologic features guided by the depositional environment and tectonic history across the basin. In this study, multiple seismic attribute transforms were applied to three-dimensional (3D) seismic data obtained from “Reigh” Field, Onshore Niger Delta to delineate and characterize geologic features capable of harboring hydrocarbon and identifying hydrocarbon productivity areas within the field. Two (2) sand units were delineated from borehole log data and their corresponding horizons were mapped on seismic data, using appropriate check-shot data of the boreholes. Petrophysical summary of the sand units revealed that the area is characterized by high sand/shale ratio, effective porosity ranged from 16 to 36% and hydrocarbon saturation between 72 and 92%. By extracting attribute maps of coherence, instantaneous frequency, instantaneous amplitude and RMS amplitude, characterization of the sand units in terms of reservoir geomorphological features, facies distribution and hydrocarbon potential was achieved. Seismic attribute results revealed (1) characteristic patterns of varying frequency and amplitude areas, (2) major control of hydrocarbon accumulation being structural, in terms of fault, (3) prospective stratigraphic pinch-out, lenticular thick hydrocarbon sand, mounded sand deposit and barrier bar deposit. Seismic Attributes analysis together with seismic structural interpretation revealed prospective structurally high zones with high sand percentage, moderate thickness and high porosity anomaly at the center of the field. The integration of different seismic attribute transforms and results from the study has improved our understanding of mapped sand units and enhanced the delineation of drillable locations which are not recognized on conventional seismic interpretations.


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