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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

South Texas Geological Society Special Publications

Abstract


Austin Chalk Exploration Symposium: Geology, Geophysics and Formation Evaluation, 1991
Page 123

Abstract: Recent Case Histories of Austin Chalk Previous HitSurfaceNext Hit Previous HitGeochemicalNext Hit Surveys: Integration of Geochemistry, Seismic, Horizontal Well Logs, and Photogeology

John Sandy1

Abstract

Reconnaissance, soil background-normalized radiometric surveys covering large portions of the Austin Chalk play provide generalized favorable areas for further investigation. Typical of the better favorable areas are linear anomalies that are a few thousand feet wide and a mile or more long. They are aligned along the northeasterly-trending set of regional fractures that are clearly discernible on aerial photographs.

Gridded soil gas surveys of the favorable radiometric areas generally reveal fracture trace-aligned trends of low-to-moderate soil gas concentrations. Higher concentrations often occur peripheral to the low-to-moderate trends.

Seismic lines shot at right angles to the northeasterly-trending fractures are processed to provide pseudo-velocity, color sections that show well-defined fracture zones of porosity in the Austin Chalk. Well log data from horizontal boreholes show a direct correlation between the Previous HitsurfaceNext Hit Previous HitgeochemicalNext Hit data and the fractures identified by the logs. It can be inferred that the utilization of these seismic, Previous HitsurfaceNext Hit-Previous HitgeochemicalNext Hit and photogeological methods makes it possible to predict the presence of hydrocarbon-bearing, vertical fracture reservoirs in the Austin Chalk.


 

Acknowledgments and Associated Footnotes

1 John Sandy: Previous HitGeochemicalNext Hit Exploration Services, Inc., Dallas

John Sandy holds BS and MS degrees from Tulane University. He began his career with Humble as a seismic interpreter in 1963. In 1967, John joined Kaiser Exploration where he managed frontier minerals exploration in Australia, New Guinea, and Arizona. From 1972 to 1980, he worked as a uranium geologist for World Minerals and Sun Oil Company. From 1980 to 1985 he worked as a petroleum consultant in Dallas and then formed Previous HitGeochemicalTop Exploration Services, Inc. where he is currently president and chief geologist.

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