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AAPG Bulletin, V. 84, No. 8 (August 2000), P. 1087-1094.

Error Estimation in Decompacted Subsidence Curves1

D. Waltham,2 C. Taberner,3 and C. Docherty4

©Copyright 2000. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
1Manuscript received October 9, 1998; revised manuscript received September 27, 1999; final acceptance January 15, 2000.
2Department of Geology, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, United Kingdom; e-mail: [email protected]
3Institut de Cièncias de la Terra, CSIC, C/ Lluís solé I Sugra-es s/n, Barcelona 08028, Spain.
4Institut de Cièncias de la Terra, CSIC, C/ Lluís solé I Sugra-es s/n, Barcelona 08028, Spain. Present address: GX Technology, Lawrence House, 45 High Street, Egham, Surrey TW20 9DP, United Kingdom.
This work was funded by the EU Joule-Thermie project (project no. JOU2-CT92-0035), whose support we warmly acknowledge.

ABSTRACT

Subsidence curves, based on decompacted sediment thicknesses, are generally displayed without indicating depth or age errors. This makes their interpretation ambiguous, leading to incorrect identification of subsidence pulses and incorrect identification of periods of steady subsidence. Error analysis should also form part of thermal maturation studies based on such subsidence curves. Formal error analysis of subsidence curves is a complex problem because of the iterative and Previous HitnonlinearTop nature of the decompaction calculations. This paper presents an alternative approach, based on Monte Carlo simulation, that allows subsidence curves to be calculated along with error estimates. We also show that identification of subsidence pulses and identification of periods of steady subsidence cannot be made on the basis of such subsidence curves, even when errors are shown, because errors on successive points on the subsidence curves are correlated. Instead, an ensemble of subsidence rate curves must be calculated at the same time as the ensemble of subsidence curves so that a mean subsidence rate curve can be calculated along with associated error estimates.

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