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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 50, No.03, November 2007. Pages 22 - 22.

Abstract: Time is Fact and Depth is an Opinion But We Drill Wells in Depth

Tim Brown
Sierra Resources

Most of us sooner or later will have to deal with seismic data that is presented mostly in depth. Most of us also have available computer workstations to aid us. To repeat what an early supervisor explained to me years ago: “Tim, I don’t know how others might do it but we drill our wells in depth, not time. Go back and bring me a depth map.” That started a long quest to derive accurate depth maps from seismic.

Depth conversion can be simple or it can be complex. Mostly we need to make a judgment call on what our purpose is in converting to depth and what resources are available to us. This talk is one person’s review of the different routes that are available to us and a judgment of their efficacy, as achieved through using one given workstation system. Although this presentation is geared to one software system, much of the same approach should be applicable on other systems. I will present two cases as examples of why this is not a trivial process.

One is a South Texas example where the objective is to convert time horizons from a merged multi-survey 3D data set that ties hundreds of wells with a demonstrated velocity range of over 1000 feet per second from the high wells to the low wells. Due to the volume of data this is not something that you would want to do by hand.

The second example is also from South Texas. Here the problem is a large “horse tailing” up-to-the-coast fault which is dying laterally combined with a large gas field with multiple stacked pays and apparent gas-saturated shales causing a local velocity slowdown.

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