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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: 4-D Seismic Interpretation Technologies and their Application to the
Eugene Island 330 Field, Offshore Louisiana
By
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, New York
The Global Basins Research Network has
developed 4-D volume processing and attribute
analysis algorithms to identify significant
seismic amplitude interconnectivity
and changes over time that result from
active fluid
migration
. To accomplish this
4-D imaging, we use multiple
3-D
seismic
surveys done several years apart over the
same blocks.
We have applied these 4-D analysis techniques
to known production from the most
prolific Pleistocene oil field in the world,
the Eugene Island 330 Field, offshore Louisiana.
Three main producing reservoirs
were examined at 4,500, 5,400, and 7,200
ft. Dim outs were detected where production
depleted oil and gas during the interval
of investigation, and amplitude increases
were observed where gas/oil ratios
increased during production. The "oil/water
contact" movement was detected by the
4-D technique. When combined with active
pressure add temperature monitoring,
repeated
3-D
seismic imaging of producing
fields promises to identify missed hydrocarbon
zones and to provide the critical
production management information of the
future.
In addition, we have imaged fluid flow
pathways that are actively recharging shallower
reservoirs in the field from fluid
sources that appear to be turbidite stacks
within salt withdrawal mini-basins buried
deep within geopressure. Fault zone conduits
provide the
migration
pathways out
of geopressure. If correct, large reserves
remain untapped within the deep shelf of
the northern Gulf of Mexico.
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