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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Application of Stratigraphic Forward
Models in Exploration Settings
By
A two-dimensional stratigraphic simulation program
has been successfully applied to clastic, carbonate, and
mixed clastic carbonate depositional regimes. The program
may be
used
to predict reservoir distribution, to constrain
interpretations of well and seismic data, to rapidly test
exploration scenarios in frontier basins, to calculate thermal
and maturity histories, and to evaluate the fundamental
controls on observed basin stratigraphy. Applications to
seismic and well-log data sets from Main Pass (U.S. Gulf
Coast), Offshore Sarawak (Malaysia) and Baltimore Canyon
(U.S. East Coast) demonstrate that the program can be
used
to simulate stratigraphy on a basin wide scale as well as
on the scale of individual prospects.
The Main Pass section, offshore Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama is an offlapping sequence of Neogene clastics.
The
model
simulates 17 million years of geologic history at a
200,000 year resolution and predicts the depth and location
of nearshore marine sands, intervals of sediment bypass
into deep water, paleobathymetry, shelf margin positions,
major and minor sequence boundaries, and gross basin
geometry. A movie will be shown illustrating the geologic
history of Main Pass from the Miocene to the present.
Central Luconia, offshore Sarawak, Malaysia is an important gas province with 7 giant gas fields and 20 smaller
fields. Much of the production is from middle to late
Miocene carbonate buildups. Three of these buildups were
simulated using a sea level history optimized to reproduce Locating Larger Reservoirs
the carbonate growth anatomy. The
model
predicts subaerial
exposure phases associated with zones of enhanced
porosity in two updip buildups with gas production. Seismic
reflection geometries indicative of transgressive, aggradational, progradational and retrogradational phases are
reproduced.
Jurassic to Pleistocene stratigraphic sequence geometries, mixed clastic/carbonate-facies
distribution and
thermal/maturity history were simulated along a 300 km
regional dip line of the Baltimore Canyon Trough. Modeled
features of interest include a progradational Middle Jurassic
carbonate margin punctuated by clastic deposition during
sea level lowstands and a late Jurassic/early Cretaceous
aggradational carbonate margin culminating in the development
and subsequent drowning of isolated carbonate
buildups. This section is of particular interest because Shell
Offshore Incorporated drilled three exploration wells in
record setting water depths (maximum 2119 meters) to test
the Upper Jurassic - Lower Cretaceous carbonate shelf
margin. The
model
predicts that, initially, carbonate buildups
formed coeval with interbedded clastics and carbonates
in an intrashelf basin. During a subsequent sea level
lowstand, the margin was subaerially exposed with consequent
leaching of carbonates and porosity enhancement
of the buildups. As sea level rose again, the shoreline
retreated landward and a shale seal was deposited.
Model
predictions are supported by detailed petrographic and
seismostratigraphic analysis.
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