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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract

P. Boult and J. Kaldi, eds., 2005, Evaluating fault and cap rock seals: AAPG Hedberg Series, no. 2, p. 151-162.

DOI:10.1306/1060762H23167

Copyright copy2005 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

Using Buoyancy Previous HitPressureNext Hit Profiles to Assess Uncertainty in Fault Seal Calibration

Peter Bretan, Graham Yielding

Badley Geoscience Limited, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors are grateful to Rob Weeden, Peter Boult, and an anonymous reviewer for their thoughtful and constructive comments.

ABSTRACT

Effective fault seal model calibration is dependent on the quality of the available data. Buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit profiles provide a method to assess the potential uncertainty involved in deriving key input data, such as Vclay (volumetric clay fraction), and in the empirical equations used to derive seal-failure criteria. For a membrane-sealing fault, seal failure occurs when the buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit exerted by the Previous HithydrocarbonNext Hit column is equal to the minimum capillary entry Previous HitpressureNext Hit of the fault zone. If the seal is intact, the predicted fault zone capillary entry Previous HitpressureNext Hit value must be higher than the buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit and, on a buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit profile, plot to the right of the buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit trend line. Predicted values that are lower than the buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit indicate either that the fault is leaking or that one or more of the input data are in error.

Buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit profiles are used postmortem to identify which data analysis techniques and seal-failure criteria best predict the observed Previous HithydrocarbonNext Hit contacts in a given area. They can also be used to verify the threshold shale gouge ratio values that represent the onset of fault sealing.

The effect of varying key input parameters can be rapidly checked using buoyancy Previous HitpressureNext Hit profiles without resorting to more time-consuming probabilistic approaches. The analysis can identify which data preparation techniques provide appropriate estimates of the fault zone capillary entry Previous HitpressureNext Hit, relative to the observed buoyancy Previous HitpressureTop, thereby significantly reducing potential uncertainty in the fault seal calibration.

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