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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 51, No. 07, March, 2009. Pages 37 and 39.

Abstract: Case Study: Highest Possible Resolution (HPR) Stratigraphic Imaging of a Deep Reef Platform

Norman S. Neidell1, James M. Charuk2, and David C. Montoya3
1N. S. Neidell and Associates (Speaker)
2Starboard Energy
3President, Monoco Petroleum Inc

To illustrate the use and benefits of Highest Possible Resolution (HPR) Stratigraphic Imaging, we present a case study using a small 3D survey over an onshore reef platform which lies at a depth greater than 15,000 feet. The views offered by the imaging from time slices and vertical sections offer remarkable direct insights into the development of the reefs on the platform, their hydrocarbon potential, the cyclic development of the carbonate lithology, shales and anhydrites, and the correlation with the well control. Seismic images (time slices) in this case look remarkably like modern aerial photographs over reef complexes. The study is significant in that it readily identifies and explains a high-volume producing gas well and a well that was deemed non-commercial.

Holographic principles applied to seismic imaging produce results having significantly broader band-widths and higher resolution than conventional signal-Previous HitprocessingNext Hit methods. Low-energy boundaries which are sharp and have great lateral continuity allow imaging to extraordinarily high frequencies. Boundaries from high-energy environments showing vertical grading and Fresnel scale lateral variations would have much lower resolution by their nature. Such imaging is termed HPR imaging and actually can estimate depositional energy.

HPR imaging typically produces results having anywhere from 8 to 32 times standard pre-stack imaging outputs in terms of samples. Resolution increases by factors of three or four are typical, although greater factors can be attained as one might expect in low-energy depositional environments.

Inversion displays of velocity are produced using an Extended Visual Dynamic Range Color format and present five times the information of typical color displays and 25 times more than black-and-white data presentations. These displays aid significantly in recognizing lithology, geopressure, porosity, and possible hydrocarbons, particularly in high-velocity or consolidated lithologic conditions.

Figure 1. Great Barrier Reef Source: ABC News

The seismic displays are readily interpreted on workstations using standard geological principles and ideas. Lithology identification, fluids, and other features can be noted with clarity and resolution with a fair degree of confidence based on the known correlations. These displays are contrasted with conventional views, which, as noted, offer far less insight and information.

Particularly noteworthy is, that by increasing seismic resolution by a factor of three or four, results better approximate the relevant geological scale, and from 17 to 23 cycles of reef development can be recognized. Dramatic displays are seen where the velocity range related to the particular age carbonates are isolated. The resulting “aerial” views via the time slices show tidal channels, atolls, and other features. Another dramatic series of displays can be developed indicating where gas is most likely

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to be found. This is accomplished by coloring in black the velocity most likely to indicate porosity with gas presence.

The high-resolution displays of the reef platform, by its nature as a high-velocity carbonate environment at fairly significant depth, demonstrate that the method is robust and can perform well in a circumstance that most would agree offers some challenges. HPR Imaging has proved itself yet again to be a most useful Previous HitinterpretiveTop tool under another set of geologic conditions.

Figure 2. Time slice – possible gases.

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