Using Seismic
Attributes
to Delineate Fractures
Satinder Chopra1 and Kurt J. Marfurt2
1Arcis Corporation, Calgary, [email protected]
2The University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK
Fractures can enhance permeability in reservoirs and
hence impact the productivity and recovery efficiency in
those areas. Fold and fault geometries, stratal architecture
and large-scale depositional elements (e.g. channels,
incised valley-fill and turbidite fan complexes) are often
difficult to see clearly on vertical and horizontal slices
through the seismic
reflection data.
Seismic
attributes
help
us in characterizing stratigraphic features that may comprise
reservoirs, and form an integral part of most interpretation
projects completed today. Coherence, curvature and relative
acoustic impedance are some important
seismic
attributes
that are used for such analysis. However, for extracting
accurate information from
seismic
attributes
, the input
seismic
data needs to be conditioned optimally. This
includes noise removal, using robust dip-steering options
and superior algorithms for computation of
seismic
attributes
. Curvature
attributes
in particular exhibit detailed
patterns for fracture networks that can be correlated with
image log and production data to ascertain their authenticity.
One way to do this correlation is to manually pick the
lineaments seen on the curvature displays for a localized
area around the borehole, and then transform these
lineaments into rose diagrams to compare with similar rose
diagrams obtained from image logs. Favorable comparison
of these rose diagrams lends confidence in the interpretation
of fractures. Another way is to generate automated 3D rose
diagrams from
seismic
attributes
and correlate them with
other lineaments seen on the coherence attribute. Volume
visualization of stratigraphic features is a great aid in 3D
seismic
interpretation and can be greatly aided by adopting
cross-plotting of
seismic
discontinuity
attributes
in the
interpretation workflow as we will demonstrate in this
presentation.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90095©2009 AAPG Eastern Section Meeting, Evansville, Indiana, September 20-22, 2009