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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: The Impending Obsolescence of Maps
By
Dynamic Resources Corporation
P.O. Box 382, Barker, TX 77413-0382
281-579-0172; fax 281-579-2141
http://www.walden3d.com/dynamic
[email protected]
Maps have provided critical information and knowledge for
society for the last millennium. A map is a representation,
on a plane and at a reduced scale, of part or the whole of the
earth's surface, according to the 1910 Encyclopaedia Britannica.
We regularly use maps to define mineral rights,
data
coverage,
drilling locations, pipeline routes, etc. However, maps only
become indispensable when there is more information available
than we can hold in our head, or when we need to confirm
artificial or legal boundaries (for example, ownership).
Computer databases and visualization technologies are providing
explorationists with real-time
3-D
views
of complex interrelationships
of their
data
as it changes across time. When new
presentation technologies are combined with the innate ability of
explorationists to visualize complex
3-D
relationships in their
mind's eye, there is no longer a need for paper representations of
the subsurface. This presentation illustrates how databases and
computer earth models, in combination with
data
mining tools
and new visualization technologies, are replacing maps and
enabling widespread application of Wallace Pratt's statement that
"in the final analysis, oil is first found in the mind."
Databases and models presented in an immersive environment
provide a new way to evaluate
data
traditionally studied as surfaces,
cross-sections, and other types of maps. By improving the
bandwidth to transfer digital information from computer storage
to the mind, or at least by making digital
data
available for interactive
access by the minds of decision makers, decisions are
improved. Displays move from the 2-D map plane to a true
3-D
visualization using immersive environments to drive computer-controlled,
human-scale stereo display and audio systems. A
regional example of identifying a new exploration concept is
shown in Texas Railroad Commission District IV, derived by
simply visualizing
data
from Richard Nehring's database. This
process works at basin or at prospect scale. Movies of interpretations
of Fairfield Industry
3-D
seismic
data
using Chroma
Energy's pattern finding tools demonstrate how visualization
helps extract geology from a
3-D
seismic
survey. With development
of these types of complex models, and because
3-D
displays help understanding, immersive environments and related
technologies are becoming common both inside and outside
the petroleum industry. They are expected to become ubiquitous
over the next decade.
Rapid comprehension of complex spatial information can be
achieved when
data
are evaluated simultaneously and proportionally
to the sources of the
data
. In the oil and gas industry,
many models require N-dimensional
data
integration.
Multi-dimensional models render major improvements, beyond
what can be derived from 2-D maps. This is particularly true
when
data
mining tools have been used to correlate and
high-grade relevant
data
relationships. Seeing and hearing
spatial relationships between
data
types highlights inconsistencies,
and the process of reconciling these differences greatly enhances
understanding. Because databases and models have embedded
knowledge and users can interact with a human scale visualization
End_Page 19---------------
as if it were another individual, a visceral understanding of the
data
can he obtained simply by walking around the model in an
immersive environment. The conventional "map reader" can
more easily replicate the three or more dimensional model in his
or her mind and then show it to others, allowing better communication
and better collaboration, either being in the same
theater or being in different networked theaters separated by
large distances. As more
data
and information become
available in every walk of life, understanding interrelationships
requires adaptation of new methods to understand spatial
complexity, which the conventional planar 2-D map can
not encompass.
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