Abstract: Integrated Techniques for Quantifying Fractures: Monterey Formation, Offshore California, USA
SCHWALBACH, JON R., and DALTON F. LOCKMAN, Exxon Company, USA, Thousand Oaks, California
Fractures are the critical element controlling production from Monterey
Formation reservoirs of the offshore Santa Barbara Channel, California.
The fractures provide important storage volume in the subsurface and the
permeability required for fluids to move into the well bore. Our efforts
focus on understanding the distribution of fractures in the reservoir,
mapping the fractures that intersect the borehole
, and quantifying the
fracture void space.
Numerous techniques are integrated to evaluate the fractures in the
cherts, dolomites, porcelanites, and shales of the Monterey Formation.
Approximately 4000 feet of core has been collected and described using
a visual technique designed to quantify fracture properties. The visual
description has been calibrated with laboratory-based measurements of cores
using CT-scans, confocal microscopy, and mercury injection capillary pressure
techniques. Extensive observations and data collection at outcrops have
been integrated to build a conceptual geologic model.
We make extensive use of borehole
image logs, carefully calibrated to
the cores, to evaluate fractures over the complete reservoir interval in
most wells. Fracture orientation determined from image logs is often superior
to orientations measured from cores, and the data are obtained much more
quickly. We also use
borehole
images to predict fracture porosity throughout
the logged interval, but have found sources of uncertainty related to
borehole
environmental conditions during logging, interpreter variability, and resolution
limits for evaluating small-aperture fractures. The key element for applying
the
borehole
image data quantitatively is having sufficient core material,
from a variety of reservoir facies, to conduct a robust calibration.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90935©1998 AAPG Pacific Section Meeting, Ventura, California