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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 82 (1998), No. 4 (April 1998), P. 545-568.

Combining Sequence Stratigraphy, Geostatistical Simulations, and Production Data for Modeling a Fluvial Reservoir in the Chaunoy Field (Triassic, France)1

R. Eschard,2 P. Lemouzy,2 C. Bacchiana,3 G. Désaubliaux,2 J. Parpant,3 and B. Smart3

©Copyright 1998.  The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.  All Rights Reserved
1Manuscript received September 25, 1996; revised manuscript received March 13, 1997; final acceptance November 14, 1997.
2Institut Français du Pétrole, 1, 4 Avenue de Bois Préau, 92852 Rueil Malmaison, France.
3Esso Rep, 213 Cours Victor-Hugo, B.P. 150, 33321 Bègles, France.

We are grateful to the Esso Rep management for giving permission to publish this paper, and to L. Montadert (IFP) for initiating and encouraging this study. Special thanks go to our colleagues I. Morelon and C. Ravenne (IFP) and J. M. Chautru (BEICIP) for their help during this work. The paper has benefited from discussions with S. Bourquin and F. Guillocheau (Rennes University) about the Paris basin geology. We also thank J. A. Johnson (Esso Rep) and AAPG reviewers K. T. Biddle, R. L. Chambers, and D. Cox for helpful suggestions on improving the manuscript. Y. Monteon and A. Nakou made the drawings.

ABSTRACT

Reservoir modeling of the Chaunoy field was performed by combining a sedimentological study, a sequence stratigraphic analysis, geostatistical simulations, and the analysis of production data and fluid-flow simulations. The reservoir corresponds to the distal part of a Middle Triassic alluvial fan system in the Paris basin (France), and is extremely heterogeneous and layered. The reservoir mostly consists of small ribbon channel deposits interbedded with flood-plain and lacustrine mudstones. The channel amalgamation rate varied with cyclic lake-level variations, which directly controlled the reservoir geometry. Within a base-level cycle, during periods of low accommodation, channels were amalgamated, forming highly heterogeneous sand sheets. As the accommodation increased, channels became progressively isolated within flood-plain mudstones. Finally, a lacustrine transgression deposited lacustrine mudstones and induced thin but widespread Previous HitverticalNext Hit permeability barriers across the field. As accommodation started to decrease, considerable pedogenetic alteration occurred, as shown by dolocretes and groundwater dolomites. Five cycles that constituted the reservoir layering framework were identified. Geostatistical simulations of lithotype distribution within these units were computed using the truncated random Gaussian function method. Horizontal and Previous HitverticalNext Hit lithotype proportion curves and variograms were calculated from well data. Because of the wide well spacing, it was not possible to determine the range of horizontal experimental variograms. Three lithotype realizations were simulated within a high-Previous HitresolutionTop grid to compare short, medium, and long correlation lengths. After assigning petrophysical properties to the lithotypes and upscaling, fluid-flow simulations were performed for the three realizations. The three flow simulations were then compared to the 10-yr production history of the field. The simulations showed quite a good match regardless of the variogram range, except in the northern part of the field, indicating a problem in the reservoir layering in this area. This relative insensibility of the flow simulation to the correlation length probably is due to the high net pay within the amalgamated channel reservoir units and to the high number of conditioning wells; however, the flow simulation performed with the longest correlation length showed the best fit with the production history. 

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