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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: High Resolution
Sequence
Stratigraphy
on a Geologic Workstation:
Hunting for Sub-Seismic Resolution
Features in Mature Basins
Sequence
Stratigraphy
on a Geologic Workstation:
Hunting for Sub-Seismic Resolution
Features in Mature BasinsBy
Vice President, Integrated Solutions,
A2D Technologies/Interpretive Imaging
Lakewood, Colorado
Sequence
stratigraphy, pioneered in the 1930s and revitalized
with the seismic tool in the 1980s, represents a powerful
approach to the interpretation of geologic systems. By applying
the discipline of careful time-line correlations and unconformity
recognition it becomes possible to identify genetically related
packages of rock that are most appropriate for subsurface mapping.
Sequence
stratigraphy and time-stratigraphic correlations
require tracing time lines from either outcrop,
well
log
, or seismic
data. Continuous outcrop and seismic data offer opportunities to trace time
lines and observe stratigraphic discordance directly.
Well
-
log
data require the careful correlation of "marker
events" in the
log
character, interpreted as time lines, over
broad areas of the basin in order to reconstruct the time-stratigraphic
basin-fill geometries of the subsurface.
Well
-
log
correlation and
sequence
stratigraphic methodology
are enhanced through the use of computer workstations capable
of working with large numbers of
well
logs. By harnessing the
power of
well
-designed software and inexpensive raster
well
-
log
images, geologists have the capability to correlate wry detailed
regional correlation frameworks established on the basis of
log
character.
Examples of high-resolution
sequence
stratigraphy are offered
from the Almond, Lewis and Fox Hills formations of the eastern
Green River Basin, where hundreds of
well
logs were correlated
with as many as 50 correlations per five-hundred foot interval.
The results delineate subtle unconformities, faults and basin-fill
geometries that are below the resolution of seismic in the area.
Techniques for overcoming computer screen size limitations and
for simulating paper-based
log
correlation techniques on a geologic
workstation are illustrated in a live software demonstration.
While much of what is possible on the computer workstation is
possible using paper
well
-logs, the sheer volume of
well
logs and
the inefficiencies of paper-based methodologies prohibit stratigraphic
studies of this detail by most workers. By leveraging the
power of the computer, low-cost raster images and the established
methodologies of
sequence
stratigraphy, the industry has
an opportunity to revisit mature basins to explore the resolution
of geologic features on a sub-seismic scale. Such features may be
the basis for a new wave of discoveries in old basins.
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