About This Item
- Full TextFull Text(subscription required)
- Pay-Per-View PurchasePay-Per-View
Purchase Options Explain
Share This Item
The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
from:
Chapter 19
Pressure Regimes in Sedimentary Basins and Their Prediction Using Geophysical Methods
Alan R. Huffman
Conoco Inc.,
Houston, Texas
ABSTRACT
The technology of pore-pressure prediction has advanced significantly in recent years. In the future,
new methods for pore-pressure prediction will routinely use shear-wave data gathered using multicomponent
seismic technology. Overburden and fracture gradient will be predicted in three dimensions
using gravity and magnetic inversion technology. Seismic inversion, both prestack and poststack, will
provide refined estimates of the velocity field in the subsurface, and new seismic-processing methods
will allow velocity anisotropy to be predicted accurately so that it can be used to predict both pore
pressure and real triaxial stress fields in the earth. These new methods will be used to make advances
in the prediction of pressures in nonclastic rocks and to extract information that can be used to accurately
predict structural hyperpressuring in reservoirs to assist in drilling difficult wells. Pressure prediction
will become a standard tool in basin-scale and prospect-scale evaluation of the hydrocarbon system
and will be used to guide the exploration process. In the production environment, pore-pressure prediction
will be used routinely to provide a three-dimensional model for the pressure regime in the
subsurface that will be critical to effective reservoir simulation and reservoir management. Despite all these advances, however, pore-pressure prediction will still be limited by the quality of
seismic data acquisition and processing technology that is used to prepare the data and by the structural
complexity of the subsurface that is to be imaged. Predictions will continue to be limited by the lack of
predrill information about the state of compaction in the subsurface that is critical to a robust pressure
prediction. Lastly, prediction accuracy will continue to be limited by the presence of secondary pressure
in situations where velocity reversals are difficult to detect on seismic data.
Pay-Per-View Purchase Options
The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.
Watermarked PDF Document: $14 | |
Open PDF Document: $24 |