borehole geophysics
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Author(s):  
Michael J. Stephens ◽  
David H. Shimabukuro ◽  
Will Chang ◽  
Janice M. Gillespie ◽  
Zack Levinson

AbstractGroundwater total dissolved solids (TDS) distribution was mapped with a three-dimensional (3D) model, and it was found that TDS variability is largely controlled by stratigraphy and geologic structure. General TDS patterns in the San Joaquin Valley of California (USA) are attributed to predominantly connate water composition and large-scale recharge from the adjacent Sierra Nevada. However, in smaller areas, stratigraphy and faulting play an important role in controlling TDS. Here, the relationship of stratigraphy and structure to TDS concentration was examined at Poso Creek Oil Field, Kern County, California. The TDS model was constructed using produced water TDS samples and borehole geophysics. The model was used to predict TDS concentration at discrete locations in 3D space and used a Gaussian process to interpolate TDS over a volume. In the overlying aquifer, TDS is typically <1,000 mg/L and increases with depth to ~1,200–3,500 mg/L in the hydrocarbon zone below the Macoma claystone—a regionally extensive, fine-grained unit—and reaches ~7,000 mg/L in isolated places. The Macoma claystone creates a vertical TDS gradient in the west where it is thickest, but control decreases to the east where it pinches out and allows freshwater recharge. Previously mapped normal faults were found to exhibit inconsistent control on TDS. In one case, high-density faulting appears to prevent recharge from flushing higher-TDS connate water. Elsewhere, the high-throw segments of a normal fault exhibit variable behavior, in places blocking lower-TDS recharge and in other cases allowing flushing. Importantly, faults apparently have differential control on oil and groundwater.


2021 ◽  
pp. 746-760
Author(s):  
Pierdominici Simona ◽  
Kück Jochem
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (11) ◽  
pp. 808-818
Author(s):  
Andrey Bakulin ◽  
Ilya Silvestrov ◽  
Roman Pevzner

Land seismic acquisition is moving toward “light and dense” geometries, with point receiver systems believed to be an ultimate configuration of choice. Cableless land nodal systems enable more flexible spatial sampling at the price of eliminating even small arrays. For large surveys in a desert environment, such spacing remains insufficient to address the complex near surface, while recordings with single sensors exhibit a significant reduction in data quality. At the same time, exploration problems increasingly demand smaller uncertainty in all seismic products. While 1 m geophone sampling could have addressed these problems, it remains out of economic reach as point sensor cost plateaus. We examine an emerging alternative technology of distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) that revolutionized borehole geophysics but is still mostly unknown in the seismic world. Fully broadband DAS sensors promise massive channel count and uncompromised inline sampling down to 0.25 m. Their distributed nature offers the unique capability to conduct a continuous recording with multiscale grids of “shallow,” “deep,” and “full-waveform inversion” receivers, all implemented with a single set of fixed cables and only one round of shooting. These distinct features allow us to simultaneously pursue near-surface characterization, imaging of deeper targets, and velocity model evaluation. Specifically, in a desert environment, distributed sensors may offer superior data quality compared to point sensors, whereas DAS capability of “seismic zoom” in the near surface becomes instrumental for near-surface characterization. Finally, simultaneous acquisition of surface seismic and vertical arrays that can be achieved easily with DAS can effectively address the exploration of subtler targets such as low-relief structures. We support these findings with a field case study from a desert environment and synthetic examples. With many distinct advantages, surface seismic with DAS emerges as a compelling alternative to modern point-sensor acquisitions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. SLi-SLii
Author(s):  
Hua Wang ◽  
Hu Li ◽  
Bo Zhang ◽  
Shuvajit Bhattacharya ◽  
Zhaohui Xu ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (11) ◽  
pp. 832-832
Author(s):  
Sarah Coyle ◽  
Jesús M. Salazar ◽  
Kyle T. Spikes

When borehole geophysics technologies and applications come to mind, often we think of vertical seismic profiles (VSPs), checkshots, or wireline logging measurements. Problems that have been addressed include resolution enhancement, coverage, illumination, and time-to-depth conversion, among others. The papers in this special section, however, extend these relatively well-known techniques to include salt proximity work, use of high-pressure and ultrahigh-pressure geophones in VSPs, distributed acoustic sensing (DAS), acoustic wellbore ranging, refinement of velocity models and image enhancement, and impacts on business value. Although all the papers could have been about, for example, DAS or vertical resolution improvements, this special section turned out to be broader in terms of the application of borehole geophysics. What drives the need for borehole geophysics in these applications? Is it the significance of business value? Is it scientific and engineering knowledge? Is it some combination thereof? The answers to those questions are not addressed directly, but each paper is unique and offers useful results and techniques across many disciplines. This special section is not extensive in terms of the number of papers, but those included are well worth reading.


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