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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Wireline Geochemical
Log
Analysis
of Thin Bed Reservoirs
Gulf of Mexico
Log
Analysis
of Thin Bed Reservoirs
Gulf of MexicoBy
Reliable detection of low contrast pay sections in offshore Pliocene strata has been facilitated by the increased resistivity associated with the oil and gas over the associated shales and water zones. However, the contrast in resistivity is often more difficult to detect in some reservoirs. Consequently, low-contrast reservoir horizons may be overlooked.
Detailed lithological studies reveal that in many cases
the subtle low resistivity reservoirs consist of thin alternating
laminae or beds of sandstone and shale. Core plugs usually
indicate the sandstone lenses have low water saturations,
high resistivity and good porosity. Associated shaly layers
have limited porosity and permeability, high water saturations
and low resistivity. Proper evaluation of porosity and
fluid saturation is difficult as the vertical resolution of many
wireline services is too large to resolve the true properties of
the thinly layered hydrocarbon productive sandstones. The
wireline
log
response reflects the average water saturation
and porosity of both the productive sand and the nonproductive
shale layers.
Evaluation of thinly layered reservoir rocks is facilitated
by an integration of wireline
log
data and data derived from
detailed evaluation of core samples. This talk addresses one
method of integrating core evaluation with geochemical
wireline
log
measurements.
The objective is to compare wireline geochemical methods and traditional methods to determine if the geochemical evaluation has any advantages over traditional evaluation for thinly bedded reservoirs. In the example well, the wireline geochemical method measures higher hydrocarbon volume in a thin-bed reservoir. The higher hydrocarbon volume results from higher computed effective porosity from the geochemical method. Porosity is verified from core measurement, but since only sidewall cores rather than whole-core plugs are available, porosity agreement is considered to be a qualitative verification. Quantitatively, the wireline geochemical method is used to calculate and compare to core measurement, values of cation exchange capacity from a knowledge of clay types and abundances.
The wireline geochemical method uses "a geochemical model" that has been calibrated with several hundred core plug measurements of elements, minerals, porosity, cation exchange capacity, grain size, and permeability from previous studies. The mineralogy defined by the geochemical model provides the basis for defining tool responses needed for interpretation of the solid portion of the rock. Additional wireline measurements provide information for the fluid portion of the rock. Combining the fluid analysis and the mineralogy provides the calculation of hydrocarbon reserves. The wireline geochemical method requires one more logging run which collects over twice as much data as traditional logging runs.
From a comparison of the wireline geochemical method
with traditional methods, we conclude that the mineralogy
derived from the elemental
log
measurements provides clay
fractions that are confirmed by cores thus contributing to
the evaluation of thinly bedded reservoirs.
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