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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Journal of Sedimentary Research (SEPM)

Abstract


Journal of Sedimentary Research
Vol. 87 (2017), No. 5. (May), Pages 460-485
Research Articles
DOI: 10.2110/jsr.2017.25

Quantitative Image Previous HitAnalysisNext Hit For Geologic Core Description

Roger J. Barnaby

Abstract

Many basic rock properties—such as lithology, bedding, grain size, sorting, and porosity—are expressed in geologic cores by changes in color, brightness, and texture. Quantitative descriptive rock properties can thus be derived from digital core images. Despite the widespread availability of high-resolution core images and image Previous HitanalysisNext Hit software, these data are underutilized by geoscientists tasked with describing core.

This paper demonstrates the application of image Previous HitanalysisNext Hit for quantitative core description using examples from three different carbonate reservoirs: (1) evaporite-rich dolostone from the First Eocene, Kuwait–Saudi Arabia Partitioned Zone, (2) vuggy dolostone from the Cretaceous Toca Formation, offshore Angola, (3) thin-bedded limestone and mudrock from the Ordovician Utica Formation, Ohio, USA. In each example, quantitative data are extracted from core images using ImageJ or WellCAD software. The image-derived descriptive parameters are consistent with petrophysical Previous HitlogNext Hit and core data, supporting the validity of this approach to core description.

Image-Previous HitanalysisNext Hit-guided core description offers many advantages over traditional hand-drawn core description: 1) hand-drawn core descriptions tend to be qualitative and core-Previous HitlogNext Hit integration is difficult and imprecise, whereas image Previous HitanalysisNext Hit generates quantitative descriptive data that are directly comparable with petrophysical datasets; 2) image Previous HitanalysisNext Hit can characterize fine-scale geologic heterogeneity that is difficult or impossible to resolve using Previous HitlogNext Hit and core plug data and hand-drawn core descriptions; 3) image Previous HitanalysisNext Hit allows geologists to generate preliminary descriptions prior to actual core viewing, a more efficient workflow that minimizes time expended in offsite core viewing, perhaps in remote locations with limited time available; 4) integration of image-derived core data with petrophysical Previous HitlogNext Hit and core data allows rigorous evaluation of core data quality—before, during, and after the process of core description.

Image Previous HitanalysisTop thus provides a valuable tool for geoscientists to efficiently generate quantitative, petrophysically significant core descriptions.


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