Constraining
Fracture Systems with Seismic Attributes: Teapot Dome, Wyoming
Salamoff, Scotty1,
Dennis L. Harry2, Jerry F. Magloughlin2 (1) Chevron North America Exploration and
Production, New Orleans, LA (2) Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO
Seismic attributes in a 3-D data volume
are used to map fracture trends in the Teapot Dome anticline in
south-central Wyoming. This Late Cretaceous-Paleogene doubly-plunging anticline is located on the
western edge of the Powder River Basin. Linear low-coherence
seismic anomalies are well-developed on reflections from the tops of the Upper
Cretaceous Frontier Formation, Lower Cretaceous Dakota Group, Jurassic Sundance
Formation, Triassic Chugwater Group, and
Pennsylvanian Tensleep Formation. These anomalies
trend NE-SW, sub-parallel to the inferred maximum stress orientation during the
Laramide orogeny and parallel
to joints mapped at the surface. The coherence anomalies correlate with seismic
wavelet phase anomalies and with decreases in average wavelet energy, maximum
amplitude, and instantaneous frequency. The attribute anomalies are associated
with two different waveform character changes compared to adjacent traces. The
first is a decrease in period and amplitude. The second is formation of a
doublet in the seismic pulse and an increase in period and decrease in
amplitude. The changes in attributes and waveform character are consistent with
scattering of seismic energy through < 30 m sub-vertical hinge-perpendicular
fracture swarms. The seismic data resolution constrains the vertical offset of
reflection horizons across the fracture swarms to be less than 10 m, indicating
that the hinge-normal fractures are joints, small offset (sub-seismic) dip-slip
faults, or strike-slip faults. The fracture systems extend from the surface to
the base of the hanging-wall, indicating that fracture-induced reservoir partitioning
is consistent throughout the hanging-wall. The study demonstrates that fracture
systems in fault-related folds that have vertical displacements below the
typical seismic resolution can be reliably imaged through seismic wavelet
attribute analysis.