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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Gulf of Mexico "
Bright
Spots"-Early Shell Discoveries 1967 to 1973
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By
Consultant, Houston, TX
The author observed a strong seismic reflection, with attenuation below the event, at a depth of approximately 2500 feet on the crest of a low-relief structure in Main Pass area, offshore Louisiana during 1967. The most likely interpretation was that a calcareous zone, a "hard streak;' caused the strong reflection. Later, two exploration wells penetrated the shallow reflection and found a 25-foot gas pay with very low sonic log velocity, a "soft" reflection.
In late 1968, a strong seismic event that conformed to fault closure
was observed on the south flank of Bay Marchand Field.
The strong event was considered a positive factor in estimating
the reserve potential of the prospect. After leasing the block,
drilling found the amplitude anomaly corresponded with a
100+ foot oil sand with approximately 100MMBO. This was the
first qualitative application of Bright
Spots.
During 1968 and early 1969, strong seismic reflections were observed at depths of 5000 to 10,000 feet on exploration prospects in the offshore Texas and Louisiana Pleistocene trend. Digital acquisition and processing preserved the relative amplitudes of seismic data in contrast to automatic gain control. Because the Pleistocene trend was essentially an unexplored province at the time, well data were not available to help determine the cause of the strong reflections.
The term Bright
Spot was coined during informal discussions.
Seismic was primarily used to map structure at that time, and
most geoscientists doubted the relationship of
Bright
Spots to
gas/oil pays.
In mid-1969, several oil and gas fields in the offshore Louisiana
Pliocene/Miocene trend were studied and Bright
Spots were correlated
with gas sands with low velocities on
the sonic logs. Shell senior management acted
quickly and an operations/research team was
formed to study seismic amplitude changes
that may be related to gas and oil pays.
Prospect Posy, Eugene Island 330 Field
The first significant quantitative application
of Bright
Spot technology was in 1970 when
Shell technical mapped two pays and predicted
the thickness of a gas sand on Eugene
Island (EI) Block 331 (150 MMBOE).
Ultimate recovery of the entire EI 330 Field,
in the Plio-Pleistocene trend, is 750 MMBOE.
At the "J" sand map level at 6500 feet, a good
Bright
Spot conformed to structural closure
(Figures 1 and 2). Amplitude/Background
(NB) and thickness measurements at "J" sand
level were made, using the program Payzo
written by Shell Geophysicist Aubrey Bassett
(Figures 2 and 3).
Figure 1. Structure map, Prospect Posy (EI 330 Field) contoured on the "J" sand.
A good Bright
Spot conforms to structural closure with downdip extent at
approximately 6750 feet.
End_Page 27---------------
There is a good match between seismic amplitude interpretation
and well data (Figures 5 and 6). All of the oil and gas pays correlate
with amplitude anomalies of varying quality. In hindsight,
the "L" sand, a few hundred feet deeper than the "L" sand, was
the first oil sand recognized as a Bright
Spot.
Crossplots called "trend curves" show reflection coefficient vs. depth for gas, oil, and wet sands and were derived from petrophysical data in different geologic provinces in offshore Louisiana. "Trend curves" were used to help interpret amplitude anomalies for the 1972 Federal lease sale.
Prospect Pine, South Marsh Island 130 Field
The first detail application of Runsum (integration of the seismic
trace) seismic processing was made at Prospect Pine (250 MMBOE
ultimate reserve in SMI 130 Field) in 1972. Seismic amplitudes
were calibrated to petrophysical trend curves. Bright
Spots were
used successfully to predict oil pays; this was very important at the
time as oil was a much more valuable resource than gas.
The West Pine amplitude anomaly located on the west side of Block 131 has the same measured amplitude as an oil pay across the syncline at Pine. Shell tested low quantities of gas, and the sonic log showed cycle skipping, suggesting that the sand had about 10% gas saturation.
Summary
Shell discoveries using Bright
Spots on the shelf of the Gulf of
Mexico (GOM) are estimated to have found 1.5 to 2 BBOE. In
the GOM deep water, the estimate of recoverable hydrocarbons
is approximately 4 BBOE. The present of
Bright
Spots was a key
factor in entering GOM Deep Water during 1983 to 1986.
Lessons from Shell initial Bright
Spot studies and Prospect
Posy and Pine successes
- Good ideas come from operations people; these need to be followed up with a research team.
- New ideas require persistence. "Beware of the skeptics."
- In hindsight, good ideas are very often simple and easy to understand.
- If technical staff and management agree on the application of new technology, "go for it."
ACKNOWLEDGMENT: Thanks to Shell Offshore in New Orleans for allowing the author to review old files so that data ''from the time" could be included in this paper.
Figure 2. Northeast-southwest seismic line (375-1127) showing "J"
sand Bright
Spot. Other amplitude anomalies above and below the
"J" sands are gas and oil pays.
Figure 3. Seismic line over crest of Prospect Posy with amplitude/background (A/B) measurements at "J" sand level. Line is approximately through location of Shell #1 well.
Figure 4. Map of "J" sand gross thickness from seismic data. Note gross thickness is 150 feet in northwest portion of Block 331 (near Shell #3) and thins to less than 60 feet near crest of structure in Block 330.
End_Page 29---------------
References
David S. Holland, John B. Leedy, David R. Lammlein, 1990, Eugene Island Block 330 Field-U.S.A. Offshore Louisiana, ip. Structural Traps III: Tectonic Fold and Fault Traps: AAPG Treatise of Petroleum Geology Atlas of Oil and Gas Fields, p. 103-143.
Michael C. Forrest, 2002, Gulf of Mexico Bright
Spots - Shell Early Discoveries
AAPG Search & Discovery website
http://www.searchanddiscovery.net/documents/forrest/index.htm
Figure 5. "J" sand log in Shell#3 well that has 166 feet gross sand and 66 net feet gas. This closely matches seismic interpretation.
Figure 6. Seismic acoustic impedance compared to well log impedance from Shell #1 test.
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