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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 40, No. 6, February 1998. Pages 13-13.

Abstract: Litho-Stratigraphy of the Miocene in the Texas and Louisiana Transitional Zone: How to Recognize Sequence Boundaries and Hydrocarbons from Seismic Data

By

Fred J. Hilterman1, J. W C. Sherwood1, R. Schellhorn2, Brad Bankhead2, and Bryan DeVault3
1Geophysical Development Corporation
2ORYX
3Colorado School of Mines

Throughout the Tertiary basins in the Gulf Coast, there are areas where the acoustic-impedance values of shales, wet sands and gas sands are approximately equal. Hydrocarbon zones do not appear as bright spots and are difficult to detect with conventional Previous Hit3-DNext Hit seismic data. In some areas, even Previous HitAVONext Hit has not been successful. This difficulty normally occurs when the rock properties are not calibrated to the various local Previous HitAVONext Hit attributes.

A Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitAVONext Hit study in the Texas and Louisiana transitional zone has been completed using well log suites, core analyses, and field production histories. Results from this study are illustrated in Figure 1, where a conventional Previous Hit3-DNext Hit section is shown in the upper portion. This section is a mixture of both chrono- and litho-stratigraphic reflections. In the bottom portion of the figure only the litho-stratigraphic reflections are retained.

Correlation of the well log curves and the field production histories to the lower section indicate that all the high-amplitude events are associated with proven hydrocarbon zones. It is obvious that the reflection amplitudes in the upper conventional Previous Hit3-DNext Hit seismic section do not identify lithology if the high-amplitude events in the lower litho-stratigraphic section are truly hydrocarbon events.

The basis for unraveling complex Previous HitAVONext Hit responses to various rock types and fluid content is a two-term seismic reflection model. The first term, the Normal Incidence reflectivity (NI), which has historically been related to chrono-stratigraphic reflections, responds to changes in acoustic impedance. The second term, defined as the Poisson Reflectivity (PR), relates to changes in Poisson's Ratio. Unlike NI, PR remains sensitive to lithologic variations within the geologic environment and is thus associated with lithostratigraphic reflections. The rock property contrasts, which generate the NI and PR response, become evident by crossplotting well log values of the natural log of acoustic impedance versus Poisson's Ratio. The crossplots show that even when the sands have the same acoustic impedance as the encasing shales, Poisson's ratio discriminates between them. To obtain a robust estimate of PR from seismic data, the Previous HitAVONext Hit processing incorporates corrections for anisotropy, which extends the Previous HitAVONext Hit Previous HitanalysisNext Hit out to very-far offset traces. After calibration to log data, the resulting PR sections depict reservoir quality sands and potential pay intervals as litho-stratigraphic sections.

Figure 1. Conventional Previous Hit3-DTop section (upper) contains both lithostratigraphic and chronostratigraphic reflections and shows little indication of hydrocarbons while the lithostratigraphic section (lower) depicts eight known gas reservoirs.

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