A New Technology for 3-D Seismic Exploration and Development of Fractured Tight Gas Reservoirs*
By
Search and Discovery Article #40177 (2005)
Posted November 10, 2005
Click
to view presentation in PDF format.
1GeoSpectrum, Inc, P.O. Box 3399, 214 W. Texas, Midland, TX 79701, phone: 432 686 8626 ([email protected])
Abstract
A 3D seismic exploration method for fractured tight gas reservoirs is developed in a study conducted for the U. S. Department of Energy. The interpretation methodology is based on three principal reservoir attributes--fracture density, clay volume, and gas content.
Seismic lineament analysis is used to map lineaments
through the reservoir zone using horizon slices and time slices. We interpret
that in a probabilistic sense where lineaments swarm and cluster together is
where reservoir fractures are most likely to be found. Leads identified using
lineament density are further screened using rock typing to identify reservoir
that is more likely to fracture. A collocated cokriged clay volume map using
near trace seismic amplitude (an AVO
attribute) is used to identify reservoir
having low clay that is interpreted to be more brittle and more prone to
fracturing. Fractured reservoir and good reservoir rock do not necessarily make
a drillable prospect, as reservoir fractures may provide a plumbing system to
both water and gas. For prospect development a gas sensitive phase gradient
AVO
attribute is used to further screen the leads to insure that gas is present.
In a gas field previously plagued with poor drilling results in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico, four new wells were spotted using the methodology and recently drilled. The wells have estimated best of 12-months production indicators of 2106, 1652, 941, and 227 MCFGPD.
Location map, San Juan Basin (after Peterson et al., 1965).
Type log, Cretaceous Greenhorn – Burro Canyon interval (after Whitehead, 1993).
Dakota production trends (after C.F. Head, 2001), seismic lineaments, and borehole image data.
References
Head, C.F., 2001, Dakota interval production, San Juan Basin, New Mexico: Burlington Resources, Farmington, New Mexico, Proprietary Map, June, 2001.
Peterson, James A., Allan J. Loleit, Charles W. Spencer , and Richard A. Ullrich, 1965, Sedimentary history and economic geology of San Juan Basin: AAAPG Bulletin v. 49, p. 2076-2119.
Whitehead, N.H., III, 1993, San Juan plays; Dakota and Dakota-Morrison formations, in C.A. Hjellming, ed., Atlas of major Rocky Mountain gas reservoirs: New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, p. 133-136.