scholarly journals A Review of Stratigraphic Foward Models (Sfm) for Carbonate Platform

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.35) ◽  
pp. 143
Author(s):  
Redwan Rosli ◽  
Michael C. Poppelreiter ◽  
Siti Nur Fathiyah Jamaludin

Stratigraphic forward modelling (SFM) is a numerical method that simulates the key factors that control depositional processes. A few models have been developed over years for different geological environment (fluvial, turbidite and carbonate). The model for carbonate system is particularly more complex compared to others. This is due to fact that carbonate system is controlled by the interplay between carbonate productivity, eustasy, subsidence/uplift. Carbonate platform’s morphology also strongly influenced by hydrodynamic factors (Wind and Waves). SFM has been used to test the hypothesis on factors that controlled the evolution of carbonate platforms. This technique also a reliable tool for hydrocarbon exploration and development. SFM has been used to predict carbonate facies distribution, petrophysical properties, and architecture of carbonate platforms. In this review paper, four SFMs namely CARB3D+, GPM CARBONATE, DIONISOS, SEDPAK are discussed.

2020 ◽  
pp. SP509-2019-88
Author(s):  
David P. Gold ◽  
Francois Baillard ◽  
Rajat Rathore ◽  
Zhengmin Zhang ◽  
Safrin Arbi

AbstractThe New Guinea Limestone Group was deposited across much of New Guinea, including the Indonesian provinces of West Papua and Papua, as part of a widespread shallow-water carbonate platform during the Paleogene and Neogene. This platform was drowned beneath deeper-water strata from the Middle to Late Miocene. Review of biostratigraphic and seismic data from the Aru Basin, offshore New Guinea, reveals a drowning succession c. 600 m thick deposited during a drowning event that lasted around 4 Ma. The objective of this study was to create a well-to-seismic tie from a single well in the study area using biostratigraphic, seismic and log data. The well-to-seismic tie was built to constrain a new velocity model to better image the drowned carbonate platform and understand the reservoir potential of the drowning succession in the zone of interest using two complimentary techniques: seismic reservoir characterization and numerical stratigraphic forward modelling. The well-to-seismic tie was achieved by matching significant biostratigraphic events, such as unconformities, with seismic horizons using stratigraphy-to-seismic. Modern stratigraphic and seismic reservoir characterization techniques, including stratigraphy-to-seismic, numerical forward modelling, velocity model building, rock physics and seismic inversion, were applied to predict rock properties such as lithology and porosity within the drowning succession.


Agronomy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1283
Author(s):  
Vasileios Ziogas ◽  
Georgia Tanou ◽  
Giasemi Morianou ◽  
Nektarios Kourgialas

Among the various abiotic stresses, drought is the major factor limiting crop productivity worldwide. Citrus has been recognized as a fruit tree crop group of great importance to the global agricultural sector since there are 140 citrus-producing countries worldwide. The majority of citrus-producing areas are subjected to dry and hot summer weather, limited availability of water resources with parallel low-quality irrigation water due to increased salinity regimes. Citrus trees are generally classified as “salt-intolerant” with high water needs, especially during summer. Water scarcity negatively affects plant growth and impairs cell metabolism, affecting the overall tree growth and the quality of produced fruit. Key factors that overall attempt to sustain and withstand the negative effect of salinity and drought stress are the extensive use of rootstocks in citriculture as well as the appropriate agronomical and irrigation practices applied. This review paper emphasizes and summarizes the crucial role of the above factors in the sustainability of citriculture.


10.1144/sp509 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 509 (1) ◽  
pp. NP-NP
Author(s):  
J. Hendry ◽  
P. Burgess ◽  
D. Hunt ◽  
X. Janson ◽  
V. Zampetti

Modern seismic data have become an essential toolkit for studying carbonate platforms and reservoirs in impressive detail. Whilst driven primarily by oil and gas exploration and development, data sharing and collaboration are delivering fundamental geological knowledge on carbonate systems, revealing platform geomorphologies and how their evolution on millennial time scales, as well as kilometric length scales, was forced by long-term eustatic, oceanographic or tectonic factors. Quantitative interrogation of modern seismic attributes in carbonate reservoirs permits flow units and barriers arising from depositional and diagenetic processes to be imaged and extrapolated between wells.This volume reviews the variety of carbonate platform and reservoir characteristics that can be interpreted from modern seismic data, illustrating the benefits of creative interaction between geophysical and carbonate geological experts at all stages of a seismic campaign. Papers cover carbonate exploration, including the uniquely challenging South Atlantic pre-salt reservoirs, seismic modelling of carbonates, and seismic indicators of fluid flow and diagenesis.


2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-10
Author(s):  
Iman Hadi

Identity and access management (IAM) system usually consist of predefined tasks as an information security system. Themain task is the authentication, since it is responsible for user identity proving for service providers that corporate with (IAM).This paper provides a review on intelligent authentication research applicable to IAM systems. These researches areevaluated according to the proposal of intelligent authentication key factors. Depending on this evaluation it could not be foundresearch implement an authentication that satisfies all these key factors.


2021 ◽  
pp. SP509-2021-51
Author(s):  
J. Hendry ◽  
P. Burgess ◽  
D. Hunt ◽  
X. Janson ◽  
V. Zampetti

AbstractImproved seismic data quality in the last 10–15 years, innovative use of seismic attribute combinations, extraction of geomorphological data, and new quantitative techniques, have significantly enhanced understanding of ancient carbonate platforms and processes. 3D data have become a fundamental toolkit for mapping carbonate depositional and diagenetic facies and associated flow units and barriers, giving a unique perspective how their relationships changed through time in response to tectonic, oceanographic and climatic forcing. Sophisticated predictions of lithology and porosity are being made from seismic data in reservoirs with good borehole log and core calibration for detailed integration with structural, paleoenvironmental and sequence stratigraphic interpretations. Geologists can now characterise entire carbonate platform systems and their large-scale evolution in time and space, including systems with few outcrop analogues such as the Lower Cretaceous Central Atlantic “Pre-Salt” carbonates. The papers introduced in this review illustrate opportunities, workflows, and potential pitfalls of modern carbonate seismic interpretation. They demonstrate advances in knowledge of carbonate systems achieved when geologists and geophysicists collaborate and innovate to maximise the value of seismic data from acquisition, through processing to interpretation. Future trends and developments, including machine learning and the significance of the energy transition, are briefly discussed.


1998 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 137 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.A. Feary ◽  
T.S. Loutit

Throughout much of the exploration history of the offshore Gippsland Basin it has been difficult to achieve acceptable accuracy or precision for time-depth conversions beneath the stratigraphically and sonically complex Seaspray Group, overlying exploration targets within the hydrocarbon-rich Latrobe Group. A regional seismic stratigraphic and seismic attribute analysis of the Oligocene-Recent Seaspray Group has been carried out as the first step towards resolving this long-standing Gippsland Basin 'velocity problem'.High-resolution 2D seismic reflection data and downhole logs were used to determine the depositional history and sequence characteristics of the Seaspray Group. This analysis was based on the premise that velocity variation must be related to, or controlled by, the nature and distribution of the dominantly cool-water carbonate facies of the Seaspray Group, and that solution of the velocity problem must be based on understanding the particular depositional and geochemical characteristics of cool-water carbonates.Detailed seismic stratigraphic analysis of the G92A dataset shows that the 16 unconformity-bounded seismic sequences within the Seaspray Group form four mega-sequences, each separated by major erosional (channel-cutting) events, with sequences reflecting variable sediment inputs from northeasterly and southwesterly sources. Seaspray Group characteristics result from interaction of complex depositional and post-depositional processes, including river incision, submarine canyon erosion, slumping, subaerial exposure, karstification, and subsurface diagenesis and erosion. Seismic attribute analysis records the variability of diagenesis and shows that diagenetic effects are predominantly concentrated along sequence boundaries, sometimes to significant depths below the sequence boundary.Results to date indicate that application of a velocity model based on this new interpretation will enable improved precision of depth estimates to the top Latrobe Group unconformity to less than five per cent.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 448-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalid Al-Ramadan ◽  
Ardiansyah Koeshidayatullah ◽  
Dave Cantrell ◽  
Peter K. Swart

The early Miocene Wadi Waqb carbonate in the Midyan Peninsula, NE Red Sea is of great interest not only because of its importance as an archive of one of the few pre-salt synrift carbonate platforms in the world, but also as a major hydrocarbon reservoir. Despite this importance, little is known about the diagenesis and heterogeneity of this succession. This study uses petrographical, elemental chemistry, stable isotope (δ13C and δ18O) and clumped isotope (Δ47) analyses to decipher the controlling processes behind the formation of various diagenetic products, especially dolomite, from two locations (Wadi Waqb and Ad-Dubaybah) that have experienced different diagenetic histories. Petrographically, the dolomites in both locations are similar, and characterized by euhedral to subhedral crystals (50–200 µm) and fabric-preserving dolomite textures. Clumped isotope analysis suggests that slightly elevated temperatures were recorded in the Ad-Dubaybah location (up to 49°C), whereas the Wadi Waqb location shows a sea-surface temperature of c. 30°C. These temperature differences, coupled with distinct δ18OVPDB values, can be used to infer the chemistry of the fluids involved in the dolomitization processes, with fluids at the Wadi Waqb location displaying much higher δ18OSMOW values (up to +4‰) compared to those at the Ad Dubaybah location (up to −3‰). Two different dolomitization models are proposed for the two sites: a seepage reflux, evaporative seawater mechanism at the Wadi Waqb location; and a fault-controlled, modified seawater mechanism at the Ad-Dubaybah location. At Ad-Dubaybah, seawater was modified through interaction with the immature basal sandstone aquifer, the Al-Wajh Formation. The spatial distribution of the dolostone bodies formed at these two locations also supports the models proposed here: with the Wadi Waqb location exhibiting massive dolostone bodies, while the dolostone bodies in the Ad-Dubaybah location are mostly clustered along the slope and platform margin. Porosity is highest in the slope sediments due to the interplay between higher precursor porosity, the grain size of the original limestone and dolomitization. Ultimately, this study provides insights into the prediction of carbonate diagenesis in an active tectonic basin and the resultant porosity distribution of a pre-salt carbonate reservoir system.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 242-242
Author(s):  
James M. Renner ◽  
Donald W. Boyd

Long-standing interpretations of paleontologic, sedimentologic, and stratigraphic evidence from Permian-Triassic marine sequences in western Wyoming have suggested an interruption in deposition of several million years' duration between the two systems, even though physical evidence of unconformity is subtle and somewhat equivocal. We postulated that an unconformity of this duration should be more pronounced in paralic and non-marine facies in central and southeast Wyoming than in adjacent inner-shelf marine facies in westcentral Wyoming. Therefore, we correlated an erathem boundary-bearing sequence from westcentral Wyoming (where it is faunally controlled) to southeast Wyoming (where it is non-fossiliferous) and studied this sequence for evidence of hiatus. The correlations were made using surface sections, surface gamma-radiation logs, and subsurface log suites.In southeast Wyoming, the lithostratigraphic equivalent to the systemic boundary in westcentral Wyoming is located within a redbed-evaporite sequence traditionally interpreted as having accumulated in paralic and/or terrestrial depositional environments. Physical evidence of disconformity at this surface in southeast Wyoming is no greater, and is in places less, than at several other horizons within the boundary-bearing sequence. Also, petrologic examination of the terrigenous clastic units below, through, and above the boundary-bearing sequence in central and southeast Wyoming suggests notable stability of the depositional environment. Southeastward stratigraphic thinning of various units within this boundary-bearing sequence is demonstrable; however, compelling evidence of regional truncation is not evident, and the stratigraphic thinning appears to be due to primary depositional processes rather than post-depositional erosion during hiatus.We interpret slow, episodic, yet generally continuous deposition of evaporite and siliciclastic units in southeast Wyoming across the Permian-Triassic boundary. If true, then conventional biostratigraphic estimates of the duration of a hiatus separating Permian inner and middle-shelf carbonate facies from overlying Triassic siliciclastics in western Wyoming appear to be overly long, and may need re-evaluation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Costantino Zuccari ◽  
Angelo Cipriani ◽  
Massimo Santantonio

<p>A geological mapping project was performed on the 1:10,000 scale in the northern Amerini Mts. (Narni–Amelia Ridge, Central Apennines), coupled with facies analysis and multidisciplinary outcrop characterisation. This project was focused on the Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous succession, in order to reconstruct the Mesozoic palaeogeography and tectono-sedimentary evolution of the study area. This sector of the Apenninic Chain (i.e. Umbria-Marche-Sabina palaeogeographic domain) experienced the Early Jurassic rifting phase, which dismembered the vast Calcare Massiccio carbonate platform. The development of a rugged submarine topography, coupled with drowning of the benthic factories, were the main effects of this normal faulting. The complex submarine physiography, made of structural highs and lows, is highlighted by facies and thickness variations of the Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous deposits. The hangingwall blocks hosted thick (hundreds of metres) pelagic successions, with variable volumes of admixed gravity-flow deposits. These successions onlapped the horst blocks along escarpments, rooted in the rift faults, where the pre-rift Calcare Massiccio was exposed. The tops of footwall blocks (Pelagic Carbonate Platforms or PCPs) were capped by thin (few tens of metres or less), fossil-rich and chert-free, condensed pelagic successions. This rift architecture was evened out at a domain scale in the Early Cretaceous. Successively, Miocene orogenic and Plio-Pleistocene extensional faulting caused uplift and exhumation of the Mesozoic rocks.</p><p>In the study area, geothematic mapping associated with the analysis of basin-margin unconformities and successions revealed a narrow and elongated Jurassic structural high (Mt. Croce di Serra - Mt. Alsicci structural high), surrounded by Jurassic basinal pelagites. The PCP-top condensed succession is not preserved. The chert-rich basinal units rest on the horst-block Calcare Massiccio through unconformity surfaces (palaeoescarpments), as marked by the silicification of the (otherwise chert-free) shallow-water limestone. The onlap successions embed megablocks of Calcare Massiccio (hundreds of metres across), detached from their parent palaeoescarpments. Very thin, condensed deposits form discontinuous veneers on the olistoliths of Calcare Massiccio (epi-olistolith deposits) and are onlapped by younger basin-fill pelagites. The beds surrounding the olistoliths are characteristically bent due to differential compaction, as their (newly acquired) strikes mimic the outline of the stiff objects they were burying.</p><p>Indirect evidence for a Toarcian, post-rift, tectonic pulse can be locally mapped, and is documented by angular unconformities between the Pliensbachian and Toarcian pelagites, as well as by mass-transport deposits found in the Rosso Ammonitico (Toarcian).</p><p>The same goes for millimetric to centimetric neptunian dykes made of Maiolica pelagites cross-cutting the Corniola Fm. (Sinemurian-Pliensbachian). These dykes, coupled with the occurrence of unconformities between Aptian-Albian pelagites (Marne a Fucoidi Fm.) and Lower Jurassic rocks (Calcare Massiccio and Corniola formations), provide evidence for a further Early Cretaceous tectonic phase, recently reported from the southern sectors of Narni-Amelia ridge.</p>


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