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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Workstation
Visualization
Techniques and Workflows:
Examples from the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico
Visualization
Techniques and Workflows:
Examples from the Deepwater Gulf of MexicoBy
1Veritas Exploration Services, Houston, Texas, USA
2Veritas Exploration Services, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
All phases of the upstream petroleum industry, from wildcat exploration to field development, now benefit from massive amounts of available data. Seismic interpretation in particular benefits from 3D seismic data volumes that nearly blanket the entire offshore Gulf of Mexico. Depth migration of seismic data has advanced to the point where the interpreter can literally treat views extracted from a three-dimensional seismic volume as a "digital outcrop".
Armed with these data and well control for calibration, it is now possible to rapidly quantify stratigraphic mapping, seismic facies analysis, and fault definition. By interactively decimating the data through opacity and subvolume detection techniques, individual fairways and prospects can be described and evaluated. Co-rendering amplitude with other seismic attribute volumes allows rapid calibration to well data and identification of attribute combinations that effectively delineate exploration and production
Figure 1. Well log correlation and attribute co-rendering, deepwater Gulf of Mexico field. (a) Strong amplitude observed on vertical section of conventional (amplitude) data can be compared with (b) AVO fluid factor data and well control and (c) visualized view of these attributes away from well control.
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parameters, providing effective input to reservoir characterization (Figure 1).
The essence of modern data
visualization
is the opportunity to
view many classes and types of data rapidly and seamlessly in a
machine-independent manner. The use of 3D
visualization
is
independent of user interpretation, maintaining objectivity in
the project evaluation. 3D
visualization
also retires the
"2D paradigm", where all interpretation and data presentation
occurs on paper, poster, or monitors. Data
visualization
, while
commonly portrayed in large
visualization
rooms employing
expensive hardware, begins rather with the simplest question of
"what if. ..?" in the interpreter's mind as he or she works at more
conventional workstations. The key to
visualization
is to
translate that question rapidly into a working
model
, which can
be constructed and evaluated in realtime by a technically
integrated staff.
Visualization
allows for rapid evaluation of
work programs; it is now possible at the onset of a project to
review the data, identify prospective regions or reservoir trends,
assess key technologic challenges, and determine an efficient
work direction, all in the course of an afternoon.
We demonstrate these techniques by displaying workflows and examples from 3D prestack depth-migrated seismic volumes in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico and other deepwater basins. Examples of full-volume description of allochthonous shallow salt bodies, use of supra-salt sediment geometries to unravel complex shallow salt remobilization history, identification and 3D mapping of channelized and fan-form sediment intervals, and mapping of probable field extent utilizing calibrated seismic attributes will be displayed in both images and animations.
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