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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Time is Fact and Depth is an Opinion But We Drill
Wells in Depth
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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