00:45 | everybody have a good lunch. Yes . When we're on campus it may |
|
00:56 | people longer to get food. I'm cooking my own food. So and |
|
01:06 | uh normally when we're on campus, give give everybody an hour, we're |
|
01:32 | on Angela. I tell you it's moving these screens around on a |
|
02:20 | Okay. I was just checking um you know, I don't like to |
|
02:25 | these recordings too long. So when when I do the professional masters |
|
02:36 | I usually uh have a morning recording an afternoon recording and I didn't see |
|
02:49 | afternoon recording pop up saying that it processing Excuse me, the morning |
|
02:54 | but I can see here that it's my file manager that it's there. |
|
03:00 | we have one for 20 um For 22, which by the way happens |
|
03:08 | be my um My 45th anniversary. anniversary, sir. Congratulations sir. |
|
03:18 | a it's a big one, but know, we haven't been married that |
|
03:23 | , so it's still kind of like honeymoon. I'm just kidding. But |
|
03:34 | , I think I'll party tonight. might even have a beer. |
|
03:46 | I guess Angela is going to be little late. I'm glad. I'm |
|
03:53 | glad that the the recording was I was a little bit worried about |
|
04:04 | . Okay, I think so. the recording. The zoom will set |
|
04:10 | while after the meeting, so only you end the meeting, the file |
|
04:16 | be set. Okay, I have wait for the meeting? Tanned. |
|
04:22 | . Okay, because sometimes when you well I stopped it, so it |
|
04:28 | be a second meeting of, it be, you need to close the |
|
04:34 | the software and it was set with video. Okay. But I stopped |
|
04:42 | recording. So when I start recording , will it be the same recording |
|
04:46 | or a new one different files different I stopped it. Right. |
|
04:53 | Okay. But it won't process until . Mm hmm. Okay. And |
|
05:01 | I looked at my file manager and found out that it's uh it's |
|
05:06 | it's made of place mark for We're ready uh in my file |
|
05:14 | So if, if this works out way it is, the Fridays will |
|
05:17 | one recording and the and the Saturdays be a morning and an afternoon recording |
|
05:23 | that when you go looking for you can figure out which one's which |
|
05:28 | normally I load them in sequence. ah There's a single one Yesterday for |
|
05:35 | 20th. Excuse me? The 21st there'll be two today A morning and |
|
05:40 | afternoon for the 22nd and then we'll the same kind of thing the next |
|
05:44 | weekends and of course the last weekend wont be a saturday. Okay. |
|
05:52 | anyway, um I believe we're recording we double check sometimes the there it |
|
06:07 | , sometimes the menu doesn't want to down. Okay. It is |
|
06:18 | Okay. Mm hmm. Mhm. . Now it's something now start backing |
|
06:25 | . Okay. So here we we were talking about reservoir characterization and |
|
06:32 | is kind of what I was getting and I think I was getting some |
|
06:36 | good answers from from Mac Dennis and lot of it has to do with |
|
06:42 | environment of deposition. And later on the course we'll look at some of |
|
06:49 | and we'll discuss uh kind of some the patterns that we see in terms |
|
06:54 | finding upwards coursing upwards and heterogeneity versus something more like homogeneity. But here |
|
07:02 | have a chart and here's unrecovered mobil percent. Okay, so um |
|
07:11 | So that I have a trouble with word since I worked for mobile which |
|
07:15 | no you have a trouble when I an E at the end of mobile |
|
07:20 | that's spelled correctly there in the thing if if the curve was all the |
|
07:27 | up to here, the very what would that mean in terms of |
|
07:38 | ? In other words, if it all the way up to here, |
|
07:40 | would mean that when we drilled the and we tried to produce, we |
|
07:45 | nothing out of the well in terms oil, maybe we got water and |
|
07:48 | was it. Okay, so this , this is not absolute but this |
|
07:57 | giving examples of different deposition environments along and the the colors changed on me |
|
08:10 | I reformatted this but the red ones solicit plastic and the oranges, these |
|
08:21 | are more red and those that are and more orange uh is a distinction |
|
08:26 | salacious which are these and carbonate rich are the lighter colored or orangish |
|
08:35 | Does everybody see that? So we strand plane wave dominated large barrier |
|
08:43 | These are all celestic plastic deposition And then here's a large reef for |
|
08:49 | toll that's a carbonate rich. The system. Okay, and here we |
|
08:59 | the same thing over here platform margin restricted platform. But over here we |
|
09:05 | mud rich turbo tight fans. And here is fan delta, sandy turbo |
|
09:17 | . Um Fan delta would be, would a fan delta. B. |
|
09:24 | have an idea what that is then government of so many branches around and |
|
09:39 | resembles like so much distribution going Okay, well normally when we talk |
|
09:44 | alluvial fans were kind of high up altitudes, high relief. And uh |
|
09:51 | sort of a big break in like there might be a fault and |
|
09:57 | you have just a big a big liberal fan forum in front of that |
|
10:05 | . In other words, it takes takes a pretty significant relief drop for |
|
10:11 | fan to cause so you have sediment down a single point and just spreading |
|
10:16 | . Uh when we have a um fan delta. That normally means it |
|
10:22 | of, it's calling it a delta it's sort of dumping into the ocean |
|
10:26 | not just another surface like a alluvial a lot of times is dropping sediments |
|
10:34 | a non or um a subject we surfaced as um excuse me, a |
|
10:45 | aerial surface as opposed to a sub surface. And delta is usually building |
|
10:50 | into a body of water. So fan delta is going to be something |
|
10:56 | there's a fault really close to the line of a body of water and |
|
11:01 | comes out like an alluvial fan, it's also a delta at the same |
|
11:06 | . And uh one of the places that happened is in the Brave formation |
|
11:12 | the North Sea, one of the faults of the riff sand came pouring |
|
11:19 | over top of it into the then North Sea and made these really good |
|
11:26 | . But anyway, we're going from lot of different deposition environments and here |
|
11:31 | can see the recovery, this is . So down here we have high |
|
11:40 | up here. We have low recovery primary production methods. Okay. And |
|
11:48 | so when you see something that's been like this? Yes. Um |
|
11:57 | which part of the graph? How make you answer this? Which part |
|
12:02 | the graph has de positional systems that need reservoir characterization. These are the |
|
12:19 | over here, which son, the towards the left. These are the |
|
12:28 | that need it. Absolutely right. for some reason these authors, I |
|
12:35 | to know Noel bob Finley and old bob finley went to south Carolina with |
|
12:40 | as a grad student. And but anyway, They put a cut |
|
12:45 | at about 40%,, which basically says if You have more than 40% of |
|
12:55 | your recoverable oil not produced, then need to go in there and figure |
|
13:01 | what's going on, what's wrong with . But if you're down here and |
|
13:04 | getting uh, You're recovering at least between 100% of what you should be |
|
13:11 | to recover and Somewhere around 60%. there's really less need to do reservoir |
|
13:19 | in this end of the spectrum. other words, a large barrier |
|
13:25 | Typically you don't need to do reservoir . And again, it's the typical |
|
13:34 | um let me see here. If got it. Now there is, |
|
13:39 | is an example from from Alaska, there's actually barrier islands. And in |
|
13:48 | title inlet, there was a flood delta. And uh, these barrier |
|
13:54 | the barrier islands are barrier bars normally be more porous and and of course |
|
14:06 | have higher permeability. Then the the delta. In other words, when |
|
14:13 | tide comes in the the flood tide , uh, you know, it |
|
14:17 | in and you get sand moved in the tide comes in and then it |
|
14:22 | when it wanes though, clay falls on it. So you get a |
|
14:25 | of clay. So make a long short, the effective porosity. The |
|
14:32 | , in other words, when it deposited, the primary effective porosity in |
|
14:36 | barrier island is usually very high in flood tide delta is going to be |
|
14:43 | but lower, but because through uh fication and you know, as as |
|
14:51 | de positional system is deposited and buried buried deeper and deeper and deeper ah |
|
14:59 | some point in its history, fluids a lot of salud Senate, we're |
|
15:07 | to pass through the barrier island very and quantum concepts consequently, because of |
|
15:17 | , the semente shin was very rapid there because there was a near near |
|
15:22 | calcium carbonate source to bring in cal cement. On the other hand, |
|
15:29 | flood title delta that had less um less effective ferocity and less permeability. |
|
15:41 | fluids couldn't get through it as So it kind of sealed off at |
|
15:45 | ends and a little bit. But the the entire rock reservoir rock was |
|
15:54 | cemented up because enough of the flow water and cellulose was not great enough |
|
16:01 | actually cement the whole thing up and was also sort of barrier faces around |
|
16:08 | with the lagoon all shells. So ended up happening uh this is up |
|
16:14 | Alaska and the and as it turns , the barrier bars up there were |
|
16:21 | productive because they were cemented their all in the flood tide deltas. Flood |
|
16:30 | deltas were the ones that had the reservoirs or the bed or the or |
|
16:35 | reservoirs period. They weren't the best , but there are reservoirs. Normally |
|
16:40 | don't see flood title delta's listed as , but this is like the reason |
|
16:45 | bringing this up is because there's exceptions this. But in general, these |
|
16:50 | systems on this end have better effective and more homogeneous porosity. And over |
|
16:59 | they have less effective porosity and and and lower permeability. And because of |
|
17:10 | , the variability of those properties within particular de positional systems become important if |
|
17:17 | going to try to do any secondary of recovery method or tertiary or |
|
17:23 | so that you can try to get most out of it. So, |
|
17:27 | way of looking at it, uh no point in spending a lot of |
|
17:30 | to get more oil out of here you've got a lot of oil out |
|
17:33 | here over here, you still have lot of oil to produce. So |
|
17:37 | a reason there's a there's a market a there's a prize, I guess |
|
17:43 | could say there's a prize for you you're able to get more oil out |
|
17:47 | here that's much greater, you this is uh Over 80% of the |
|
17:52 | the oil is still there over you only have ah, You |
|
17:57 | you have less than 10%. So would you spend a lot of extra |
|
18:01 | studying it to try to get almost out. So here you have a |
|
18:05 | of volume to produce here, you little volume to produce. But also |
|
18:10 | also know this is more homogeneous, is why it has a strong |
|
18:16 | That's why all of these down here strong drives. And then it gets |
|
18:20 | little spotty as you come come up these things that are a little bit |
|
18:24 | heterogeneous and then things that are very , it becomes more complicated so then |
|
18:30 | becomes more apparent that you need to reservoir characterization and uh I'm not going |
|
18:38 | read all the way through this but this is just kind of showing |
|
18:43 | through the process. It's um it's of like the uh the diagram I |
|
18:51 | earlier, which which came out of book, but this is has kind |
|
18:54 | shown you, I made this to of show you how um the amount |
|
18:59 | effort that gs geophysicist geologists and reservoir tend to tend to spend on each |
|
19:08 | of these particular steps and this, is primarily looking at um conventional, |
|
19:19 | . I think the geologists are going have to shift, they do some |
|
19:23 | up here looking for a new areas that sort of thing. But a |
|
19:28 | of their energy is really at the the appraisal, through development and production |
|
19:35 | because it's a drill drill drill Okay, so in summary petroleum |
|
19:45 | the application of geosciences in the business turning petroleum resources into reserves. |
|
19:50 | that's a nice concise definition. Ah . And uh that's a good one |
|
19:58 | . So we had one at the of this section and one at the |
|
20:02 | and so now we're going to be at basic terms and we've already talked |
|
20:08 | those, but there's really um five that are critical in the sense of |
|
20:22 | I don't know why this, I this got formatted somehow, but these |
|
20:27 | supposed to be highlighted. These are things that we're going to look |
|
20:33 | We're going to look at process the processing petroleum composition in this section. |
|
20:40 | the first thing we're going to look is the trap, the source |
|
20:42 | the seal, the reservoir rock in of migration. And oh yeah, |
|
20:50 | I have almost have all the asterix here. There's supposed to be one |
|
20:54 | too. Uh Sometimes when you you to go to a I just went |
|
21:00 | a better background and it changed a and I didn't catch all the all |
|
21:05 | re formats and what it did to . And this, this is out |
|
21:09 | your, out of the second edition the book And I believe it's still |
|
21:15 | 1, 1 But it was figure in the first in the first |
|
21:19 | But the graphics weren't as good as this, They're a little bit shaded |
|
21:24 | faded. But what this is trying show you is really All five of |
|
21:32 | things and their relationship to a reservoir a petroleum system together they make up |
|
21:40 | five elements of a petroleum system. uh, I'm sure that the doctor |
|
21:46 | talk about this a lot. And , so one of the things that |
|
21:52 | want to, I want to make you understand is what's the difference between |
|
21:57 | trap and a shield and a Rather, here's the trap and here's |
|
22:08 | seal. What's the difference between those things I would say? Um, |
|
22:14 | the diagram, the seal is basically caprock shell or, or very, |
|
22:21 | low paras on rock, the aging the hydrocarbon. Why the trap is |
|
22:28 | entire At 16 a future or future I see where. Okay, |
|
22:37 | So the trap is a three dimensional that confines that oil that's buoyant from |
|
22:45 | out. It's, it's like a . It's not always just a sealing |
|
22:50 | . Lots of times will be a and you might have a fault |
|
22:55 | that's blocking the flow farther up In other words, a fault could |
|
22:59 | coming right through here and the trap be in this area and instead of |
|
23:03 | there and the oil that's migrating up would get trapped on that thing. |
|
23:08 | , you could have a reservoir come here, there's a fault on this |
|
23:12 | . And what happens a lot of around salt domes is that you do |
|
23:16 | major faults around the faces of the and they end up black blocking the |
|
23:25 | beds related to that, that die IQ action and it forms the trap |
|
23:31 | of course the seal is simply whatever is that that binds the trap and |
|
23:40 | a lower porosity compared to the, cap rock. The dr frog has |
|
23:48 | lower porosity because it does not allow to escape compared to the seal |
|
23:53 | Okay, yeah, well, I , the cap rock is a seal |
|
23:59 | , you know, it's this, concept of a seal is not what |
|
24:02 | made out of. The concept of seal is what's holding in the, |
|
24:05 | the oil. And uh, and the hydrocarbons could be gas, but |
|
24:12 | uh kind of what it sounds like getting at is it is some, |
|
24:18 | of the seals are like cap rock they're, they're almost impermeable, totally |
|
24:25 | . But there are other seals that more like plays, for example, |
|
24:31 | might leak. Is that what you're to get at? I told |
|
24:37 | not crap, It's this, I'm so horrible. I didn't get my |
|
24:41 | and I told the trap rock has lower for us, you know, |
|
24:45 | cap. Uh oh, the other around the trap has lower compared to |
|
24:54 | seal and the cap. Okay, , the trap is the trap is |
|
24:58 | actually Is not by itself just to the trap is the three D uh |
|
25:07 | of the seal. In other you could have a seal rock like |
|
25:11 | and it wouldn't be a trap if there's a porous rock going like |
|
25:16 | So the the seal is whatever holds container and we're going to look at |
|
25:22 | lot of different examples, but it just have to be a shale or |
|
25:27 | cap rock. Okay, that's what seal is. But the trap, |
|
25:34 | trap is this whole thing, The is only, you know, whatever |
|
25:41 | boundary is. So the the trap a is a three dimensional thing, |
|
25:47 | the seal is a surface, it's of like um the seal is the |
|
25:54 | of the trap. Okay, and the seal is a very special |
|
26:00 | because exactly where that seal is, could have a porous rock and it |
|
26:05 | be able to hold it in, there was nothing, there wasn't a |
|
26:10 | of something to hold it in, it would leak through a porous rock |
|
26:15 | another porous rock. And you'd you haven't gone to blue sky tertiary |
|
26:21 | migration instead of secondary migration. So so it may be a little bit |
|
26:29 | , but but um a seal is integral part of a trap. |
|
26:35 | but the trap is the shape, seal is something that blocks it. |
|
26:42 | you can have a you could have carbonate rich seal, you could have |
|
26:46 | solicitor, plastic rich seal, but can also have a fault as a |
|
26:52 | , a fault could seal it not this diagram because we don't have an |
|
26:57 | , but if we had an offset a fault block and and a sandstone |
|
27:02 | the down surround block, which is , might hit a shale on the |
|
27:09 | the inside on the football. And and the fault seals it from for |
|
27:19 | and and uh and other cataclysmic things can happen to seal it off and |
|
27:25 | give the formation on the other side the fault from the sand is a |
|
27:31 | . That fault structure itself is what's the seal, do you understand? |
|
27:39 | , it's not, it's not one stronger than the other one, is |
|
27:43 | 3? Um The simplest uh Trap four way closure, like an upside |
|
27:50 | cup. Okay. And uh and cup would be the trap the ceramic |
|
27:59 | the cup is made out of, be the seal. Okay, But |
|
28:04 | doesn't have to be ceramic, you still have a cup shape, |
|
28:08 | limestone, you could have a cup . Solicit plastic tight rock either |
|
28:13 | Okay. But one of the things I thought you were getting at is |
|
28:18 | that um are friable are different than that aren't friable. So, if |
|
28:23 | have a a carbonate seal, you really break through that, you |
|
28:33 | it doesn't just bend and uh there's high some solicit plastics are the same |
|
28:40 | , but you have really low, , low permeability, so it doesn't |
|
28:44 | . But if the buoyancy pressure gets enough to fracture the rock, it |
|
28:48 | fracture the rock. And it's hard do that with solicited plastic shells. |
|
28:52 | solicit plastic shells have some some permeability it's variable, so they leak a |
|
28:59 | bit and that's the seal that And that's the difference there. But |
|
29:04 | trap is actually the three dimensional structure the seal encloses. And the trap |
|
29:12 | what contains the reservoir. And if a leak point around the edge of |
|
29:19 | seal, uh, that, that , is also defined by the trap |
|
29:23 | not necessarily where the seal is. , okay, then, the other |
|
29:31 | , the reservoir rock is simply a that has ferocity, that is |
|
29:39 | It has to be effective process. other words, there has to be |
|
29:43 | . And here's a little diagram over showing you a water film. So |
|
29:50 | is water, water, wet probably with oil inside here, and |
|
29:59 | interacting with the water and the surface the and not the surface, direct |
|
30:04 | of the grains. And uh, so that relates to a thing called |
|
30:09 | humidity. Excuse me, relative permeability , we have a source rock down |
|
30:16 | and oil migrates up. This poorest and it gets caught by this upside |
|
30:23 | cup because, because it's buoyant, really the same thing as turning upside |
|
30:29 | , pouring water into a cup, this case the buoyant thing is going |
|
30:33 | . So the direction of flow is and so you have to have that |
|
30:36 | down, cup like feature to trap . And that's what the trap |
|
30:43 | Okay here, they're showing you the water contact. But here again, |
|
30:47 | the trap, the seal, the , there's a source rock down here |
|
30:53 | , it's been matured and there's migration other elements in here are the and |
|
30:59 | have to have a reservoir rock. this is showing you that in this |
|
31:04 | , the reservoir interval may have inter of shales for mud stones, |
|
31:11 | that have less porosity and less effective and lower permeability. And here is |
|
31:18 | you how you somewhat determine net versus , your sandstone, that might be |
|
31:24 | sandstone, it's this thick, but , it's, it's got beds within |
|
31:30 | unit that have that have a lot sand beds with limited amount of |
|
31:35 | So your net to gross is like . And when we look at electric |
|
31:40 | , we're going to see on the and the sp, we're going to |
|
31:46 | things that indicate shale part ing's that not be real obvious to you, |
|
31:52 | , but they're going to be things are like this where to get an |
|
31:57 | net pay. You need need to that interval to get the net pay |
|
32:03 | you have in that formation. This Say uh 15 ft, make it |
|
32:09 | ft thick. But this is only ft, 40 ft and 40 |
|
32:15 | So your net is 120. And um I think you had this |
|
32:26 | build a praise class but I think important thing to understand when you're a |
|
32:31 | and especially a reservoir geologist is that size of the particles has no impact |
|
32:37 | ferocity and uh however, it does an impact on permeability because the smaller |
|
32:47 | particles are, the smaller the pore and the harder it is for the |
|
32:52 | , the admissible fluids to be transmitted each other. The oil against the |
|
32:58 | or natural gas against water or oil vice versa. And you can see |
|
33:05 | what does affect ferocity in this The article enrichments. Exactly yeah. |
|
33:14 | arrangement of the, of the particles the fabric of the particles has a |
|
33:18 | to do with with that. Now are perfect spheres in the world is |
|
33:26 | perfect spheres. Uh but here's another that has a big impact on ferocity |
|
33:33 | also effective ferocity. And that is if you have poor sorting the smaller |
|
33:43 | can fill in the pores and the throats and something that might otherwise have |
|
33:51 | good ferocity. And here you can that these bigger grains have what we |
|
33:57 | it as a cubic arrangement. President , rahmbo arrangement and it still has |
|
34:05 | It goes from 48% to 0 porosity the small particles have completely filled in |
|
34:11 | and the likelihood of that happening is , pretty slim. But but this |
|
34:16 | you that that the size of the alone does not affect ferocity but it |
|
34:25 | affect permeability. But another thing that ferocity is going to be sorting and |
|
34:34 | this is well sorted, this is sorted, but this is poorly sorted |
|
34:42 | uh and so that's basically what, that's getting in. So heterogeneity is |
|
34:48 | important. So in that vein, about being a reservoir geologist and you |
|
34:57 | about, you know, we just at deposition environments right then we just |
|
35:02 | at a whole bunch of deposition Uh what was one of the things |
|
35:06 | had sort of the most homogeneous, the most homogeneous porosity and permeability. |
|
35:14 | what the most Of those environments of ? What one was listed their first |
|
35:19 | second. Either one the strong plain dominated, right in the, in |
|
35:26 | barrier island. Right? Yes. , now just imagine in a primary |
|
35:33 | as when it's first deposited before it getting compacted or anything? It's going |
|
35:40 | start out looking like this. And just take the barrier island, is |
|
35:46 | barrier island going to look like that is the barrier island sediment gonna look |
|
35:50 | this? It should look like The 48-0 curiosity For this one, |
|
36:01 | ? No, the the one with mixture a barrier island. Okay, |
|
36:09 | this is where process and that the point of trying to figure out de |
|
36:13 | systems comes into play because we're looking certain things. The process is in |
|
36:20 | barrier island are going to favor something this or this. The process is |
|
36:29 | a debris flow are going to look like this. Okay, so the |
|
36:37 | is that develops sediments in some of high energy environments uh are gonna end |
|
36:44 | being cleaner. This is a debris . That's certainly a high energy uh |
|
36:50 | . But what's the difference in the between a se stands on a barrier |
|
36:56 | or a beach for that matter? strand plane or or a debris |
|
37:02 | What's what is what is different about process that makes sense like this versus |
|
37:09 | like that? Well, it um look at it as the energy during |
|
37:15 | position. So for the blood barrier um since we're going to have mostly |
|
37:22 | , like on the beach, we on waves to these areas of high |
|
37:28 | deposition environment. Why um the bridge constitute of it's also high energy but |
|
37:38 | has coarse grained and fine grained sediments well. Okay, so one of |
|
37:45 | of them is a gravity flow and it's often like a collapsed structure gets |
|
37:49 | started yes or an avalanche or But in that case you you know |
|
37:57 | thing that you might have um where have a debris flow is um particularly |
|
38:08 | in some places you're gonna have immature sources and even if you have uh |
|
38:16 | collapsing on the coast to form a tight ah that section that collapses and |
|
38:27 | a turbine aight often it's going to sand and mud mixed in it, |
|
38:33 | , and something that's like a real type debris flow, it's going to |
|
38:40 | , it's going to be rock pieces of rock, mineral grains that |
|
38:48 | been chemically weathered completely, and then some cases mineral grains that have been |
|
38:53 | completely. So there's gonna be some , there's gonna be some reduced sized |
|
38:59 | , there's gonna be some big brains of rock like these. These rounded |
|
39:04 | might be a rock that has lots different particles inside of it, but |
|
39:09 | like a piece of concrete as it perhaps an igneous rock or a metamorphic |
|
39:16 | . And uh so in in the islands situation, the source of the |
|
39:25 | is actually controlled by that wave energy you're talking about. And the wave |
|
39:29 | is a very special thing. The energy tends to winnow out certain grain |
|
39:36 | and it keeps other grain sizes and , most of the coastlines that have |
|
39:44 | nice sandy beaches. They typically have wave, wind, wind effects, |
|
39:53 | waves, wind and waves and uh and limited other sources of things that |
|
39:59 | going to affect it. So you , you have kind of a a |
|
40:03 | velocity and in a minimum velocity, maximum velocity manages to activate and motivate |
|
40:13 | suspension of the fine grain stuff and winnows it out of the sand and |
|
40:18 | you end up with a lot of that are the same size because it's |
|
40:22 | natural winnowing system. Whereas the debris turbine aight are our natural mixing |
|
40:30 | And uh, and so that's one the reasons why on the chart, |
|
40:36 | turbo tight fan, muddy turbo tight was on one end and the barrier |
|
40:41 | and strand planes were on the other . And it has to do simply |
|
40:45 | de positional processes kind of can point into the direction the very direction of |
|
40:52 | the best reservoir rocks are going to . And at the frontier exploration |
|
40:57 | it's a good thing to be able understand what sorts of de positional settings |
|
41:02 | environments you might find if you start in a particular area. And then |
|
41:06 | you get into the exploration it becomes more important. And then when you |
|
41:10 | down into looking at things at the development production levels, it's absolutely critically |
|
41:21 | that you understand not only the different , but why those different faces are |
|
41:27 | . We're not there. And, know, if you're in a flu |
|
41:31 | system, you're looking for a different of deposition all faces in a different |
|
41:37 | of energy to end up with well sand stones and the same with debris |
|
41:44 | and turbulence. Okay, so another that has a big impact on, |
|
41:52 | , on the effective porosity and permeability a given rock is going to be |
|
42:05 | plus packing And here you can see are funny looking shapes, they're not |
|
42:11 | but these shapes automatically. Ah uh think this is really a good example |
|
42:19 | some shapes can actually create almost like structures and create lots of pore |
|
42:26 | But because these are smaller particles in different shapes, they might have a |
|
42:31 | opening here and a small opening You can see the size of the |
|
42:35 | is very variable through here. So the ferocity sizes in the pore throats |
|
42:41 | change but you have a high high coming through here and and it also |
|
42:50 | enough channels to have a relatively high . One of the things that would |
|
42:58 | is like here you practically lose all permeability porosity and permeability just because of |
|
43:04 | way that is. But these would grains that might be ah supported in |
|
43:09 | dimensions by contact points that are leaving pore throats open. Something similar to |
|
43:16 | in the let's see if I can something, I was looking for a |
|
43:29 | uh poker chip. Mhm. uh the the chalks in the North |
|
43:37 | are made out of disk, like from Macaca with and those disc like |
|
43:44 | , It can be, you like 10 microns are very small, |
|
43:48 | when they, when they settle to bottom, they can settle like this |
|
43:52 | create a lot of Tps and uh so they have all these little |
|
43:57 | so it's like a house of cards , and some of the chalk reservoirs |
|
44:02 | North Sea, the reservoirs were charged oil and gas before there was cement |
|
44:11 | . And so the charge and the has these teepee structures to the porosity |
|
44:17 | some of those reservoirs Is as high 60%,, which is enormous and that's |
|
44:23 | because they're small grains or big it's because because as they fell down |
|
44:29 | little wafers, they end up like . Now if you if you put |
|
44:33 | lot of weight on these things uh the oil charges late, they're likely |
|
44:39 | to collapse like this and the process going to go and the thickness of |
|
44:43 | rock is gonna go, But if charged early near, surface like some |
|
44:49 | around 2000 ft, or less. gonna, you might be able to |
|
44:55 | an oil charge in there to start to include the water to to push |
|
45:03 | water out. And and also ah fluid in there to kind of hold |
|
45:11 | structure together, so it doesn't So hydrostatic lee, it's the oil |
|
45:16 | going to be holding this structure like until we drill into it. And |
|
45:21 | a logically it's not gonna be able cement because to get cement stuff for |
|
45:25 | , you have to have solute rich come through that are super saturated and |
|
45:30 | won't be able to push the oil if there's a seal and so it |
|
45:36 | it in the same chalks in other . Uh the the oil charge was |
|
45:44 | semente shin and it made the rocks and they flexed a little bit because |
|
45:49 | were Dieterich structures around them and they they were able to fracture. So |
|
45:57 | have a lot of natural porosity, fracture porosity that was filled with oil |
|
46:01 | gas. Okay, so, so know, these are kind of like |
|
46:07 | diagrams, but I'm trying to, to get across to you that we |
|
46:11 | see lots of combinations of shapes and , but it's, it's critically important |
|
46:17 | realize that bigger is not always better smaller is not always better. A |
|
46:24 | of it has to do with the of the grains and also the timing |
|
46:28 | the charging of the reservoir itself. that was also true in the |
|
46:34 | I gave you about the ah bear up on the north slope and in |
|
46:44 | title, the flood title Deltas. before it was able to get |
|
46:51 | The very poorest bear islands had lots soy, it's come through and cemented |
|
46:56 | , whereas that happened prior to charge then after after that happened, the |
|
47:04 | title delta still had ah un cemented and permeability. So it was able |
|
47:10 | accept that oil charge when the migration . Okay, so here we have |
|
47:18 | of arrangement and sizes of things and just shows you uh something else. |
|
47:26 | Geophysics have a I think have a name for this kind of thing in |
|
47:30 | feature and so this has a direction example, you can see here that |
|
47:39 | one direction ah we have a horizontal of appear to to Darcy's And a |
|
47:51 | permeability of 800 mila Darcy's. And and so you can get these flow |
|
47:59 | that have a direction and what do call that in geophysics when you have |
|
48:03 | uh different permeability and different or anything in in vertical. That's |
|
48:09 | It's a nice a tropic. Okay, so that's a nice big |
|
48:15 | for for arranged heterogeneity. So you you can kind of see this in |
|
48:22 | different combinations of sizes and shapes of . And another thing that obviously affects |
|
48:33 | , effect, effective porosity and permeability cement ation. And here here's what |
|
48:41 | . You have no no grains in then you get the cementing going |
|
48:46 | And uh and of course once semente starts it starts to make the pore |
|
48:51 | closes pore throats, makes them smaller makes the porosity less. And as |
|
48:57 | going through lift ification uh of Iraq sedimentary rock. We're also going to |
|
49:04 | compaction, which is going to ah Is very, this is really compaction |
|
49:13 | here with spherical things. You can see that it drops you from 48 |
|
49:17 | 26 in a heartbeat. But if have solicited plastic clays, um I've |
|
49:25 | with um smeg tight rich cores in turkana, worked with Duke University on |
|
49:33 | project and some fellas from Harvard. uh when we were looking at the |
|
49:40 | african rift lakes and some of the that we had there had ferocity ease |
|
49:46 | excess of 80%. And it's, because it had the solicit plastic spectating |
|
49:57 | absorb water and if you took a of the core and you evaporated all |
|
50:07 | water in it, it would drop to a little piece of rock like |
|
50:18 | . And so what that tells you that, that the watering plays a |
|
50:25 | role in displacing um the porosity and it in with rock. For |
|
50:33 | if I have these kaka lists that like stacked cards and they fall down |
|
50:38 | that, that compaction ah along with came the watering and it made it |
|
50:45 | flat and really small, just as example along the coast of uh one |
|
50:51 | the East African Rift Lakes. They some deposits I believe from the Miocene |
|
50:59 | Particularly around Lake Turkana which was almost spec type. And they and I |
|
51:06 | a piece of this rock and you take a piece about the size of |
|
51:10 | end of my index finger here And could put it in a 50 millim |
|
51:16 | and fill it up with water. the clay would expand and expand and |
|
51:21 | would come out over the top of 50 millimeter thing. And, and |
|
51:26 | something that happens in primary process. again, if you have, if |
|
51:32 | have a rock that has not de and d compacted and it can get |
|
51:37 | , it's going to have a significant of unsupported grain ferocity and it's going |
|
51:43 | be supported by the fluid itself. that's what happens in the some of |
|
51:48 | clay, certain clay reservoirs in the Sea. And when you produce |
|
51:52 | What do you think comes out of , well, maybe next week. |
|
52:01 | show you the answer to that Um I have a I have a |
|
52:06 | from one of our discovery wells in North Sea ah where we produced oil |
|
52:12 | chalk together. And and Angela was about special problems. That's certainly a |
|
52:21 | problem. Uh Most people, most engineers are not told what are you |
|
52:27 | do with with chalk disposal? What you mean chalk dispense? And uh |
|
52:34 | you got to figure out what to with it because it's it's a it's |
|
52:36 | definite a detriment to your, to bottom line. Okay, so we |
|
52:43 | to hear and this is just showing some examples of when you have multiple |
|
52:48 | in these pores. Not only is the friction between one fluid in in |
|
52:54 | solid, but when you have multiple that don't mix, they also have |
|
52:59 | level of friction against each other. it's it's pretty much relative permeability. |
|
53:05 | don't like to get into the physics it, but I think it's kind |
|
53:10 | easy. Ah natural gas almost in form is going to have the highest |
|
53:18 | permeability. What is going to be next highest and then the next after |
|
53:25 | is where the lowest is going to oil. And if anything gets in |
|
53:28 | way of the oil, it will the oil. And if you have |
|
53:35 | breakthrough from a water flood or even one well is producing too fast, |
|
53:40 | not choked enough. Um And there's race between the water and the |
|
53:48 | The water is going to win and to that pipe quicker than your oil |
|
53:52 | . So that's why you want to down at a relatively moderate pace so |
|
53:57 | the water moves slowly as it pushes fluid, it can't mix with rather |
|
54:02 | have it break through the boundary of oil water content. Okay, I |
|
54:08 | this out a little bit. This something that you'll need to remember net |
|
54:11 | gross, make sure you take a at this slide and read it and |
|
54:16 | what it means. Um A lot people will see something that looks like |
|
54:22 | rich sandstone and they'll think the whole is the net but there's little |
|
54:31 | It's kind of hard to explain it you since I'm not sure everybody knows |
|
54:36 | basics on electric logs or sp and , but in the industry you've learned |
|
54:44 | lot of rules of thumb and how how to do things without actually running |
|
54:51 | . Having said that um when I sitting Wells as a young geologist, |
|
54:59 | had it, You've probably never heard this, but ATI 59 calculator and |
|
55:04 | had these little strips of of magnetic tape that would go into it. |
|
55:10 | I actually wrote petro physical programs and actually purchased some and wrote some other |
|
55:17 | . And I could run this this program through the calculator and I could |
|
55:22 | in certain numbers and get it to all the Petro physics algorithms that you |
|
55:27 | done on a workstation. It was lot easier to carry than a |
|
55:32 | And and I got to tell you it was a lot easier to input |
|
55:38 | then it can be on some but but once you get all your |
|
55:42 | set up on a workstation, you do an awful lot in a |
|
55:46 | So you don't do that. But you learn a lot when you actually |
|
55:52 | have a hand in the calculation of of these different algorithms and you realize |
|
55:59 | quickly than someone who just works with machine where the machine fails, not |
|
56:05 | the machine is not adding it right? But because the algorithms are |
|
56:09 | perfect in every example, because there's variables that some, most algorithms that |
|
56:15 | have in petro physics are based on lot of assumptions. And if those |
|
56:20 | change, the outcome can be inaccurate not very pretty and far from precise |
|
56:27 | the way. So it always helps understand what it is you're measuring and |
|
56:31 | it is you're calculating in terms of measurements and the assumptions behind that |
|
56:38 | Okay. Um so anyway, I'll you read this and this could be |
|
56:42 | good test question and um this is the beginning of your book, but |
|
56:50 | comes up really important. This is important chart when we start doing the |
|
56:55 | and volumetric exercise and I've added some things. So maybe make a note |
|
57:01 | this chart, You may need it we get to the mapping exercise. |
|
57:07 | reiterate a lot of these points, but one of one of the things |
|
57:13 | um it's really important to kind of in the back of your mind What |
|
57:20 | is for example, it's good to that a barrel of oil is 42 |
|
57:26 | and if you're trying to sell oil and you're trying to get a good |
|
57:33 | for it. You try to put gallons in that barrel? There's no |
|
57:37 | thing as a 42 gallon barrel But anyway, Most drums were somewhere |
|
57:43 | 50-55. The real important one now a 55 gallon barrel. Some of |
|
57:51 | first oil was put in barrels from whiskey industry, uh, and in |
|
57:58 | liquor industry, in the Appalachians and so they, They were somewhere |
|
58:05 | 42 gallons, but eventually they decided come up with a, a set |
|
58:11 | so that people, People selling you know, selling a bearable of |
|
58:17 | and something this size versus one that this size uh, you know, |
|
58:22 | wouldn't get ripped off or one way the other. In other words, |
|
58:25 | get the same thing. So they the barrel at 42 gallons. There |
|
58:31 | a, an art show here at University of Houston Art Museum and an |
|
58:39 | did a thing on the oil industry they actually had a 42 gallon |
|
58:47 | plexiglass barrel full of crude oil so people could actually visualize what a barrel |
|
58:53 | oil was. And uh, when , when they moved this thing, |
|
58:58 | became very difficult to uh, to transport it because oil crude oil is |
|
59:07 | toxic and they had to get special to ship it on different types of |
|
59:13 | systems to get it over here to , they were all in California |
|
59:19 | and that was a difficult thing, how do you, do you guys |
|
59:25 | better when you hear about oil volumes the metric or in the imperial? |
|
59:35 | would say in peer by group then my unit and metric. But right |
|
59:41 | I will prevent pierre. Okay. , yeah, because this says imperial |
|
59:48 | oilfield. The oilfield uses uses the system. And uh, and one |
|
59:57 | the problems that I've always had is conversions and not because they're hard to |
|
60:04 | . It's just that when when you things, say in feet like you |
|
60:11 | in the United States, then you to keep your data and your and |
|
60:19 | in feed in the imperial system because you convert, It's not a big |
|
60:24 | when you're looking at converting a 15,000 well to however many meters that |
|
60:30 | that's a piece of cake. But you get down to the fine tune |
|
60:33 | laminate and stuff like that, things get way off just because conversions are |
|
60:40 | a perfect number. And uh, so I like, so when I |
|
60:44 | in the, in the North I did metric and when I worked |
|
60:48 | , um, work in the US other places that use the imperial |
|
60:53 | I use feet. And uh, , and also there are places where |
|
60:59 | are measured now in meters. So , even in the United States. |
|
61:06 | if if I get a measurement that's in meters. I keep my data |
|
61:11 | meters. If I need to come with a display that shows it in |
|
61:15 | Imperial, that's the only time I do it. But when I'm doing |
|
61:19 | analysis and my review of data, try to keep it in the system |
|
61:24 | the imperial system and I think that's good advice for everybody. Uh use |
|
61:29 | works. But first step when you're information and dealing with feet, stick |
|
61:41 | feet, when you're dealing with the data was the wire line log |
|
61:45 | collected in meters. Keep it in of the wire line log is |
|
61:49 | its feet and convert when necessary for . Okay. Um Another really important |
|
62:02 | um is that the strategy correlation and that's really important. But there there |
|
62:11 | a lot of complexities to this. another thing is sequenced photographic correlation which |
|
62:17 | a little bit different. Ah But little strata graphic, we're basically looking |
|
62:23 | things defined primarily by the the litas versus any other feature in the sequence |
|
62:31 | really is looking at things like um surfaces, flooding surfaces, photographic surfaces |
|
62:38 | they have. Ah And also things call sequences and pair of sequences and |
|
62:46 | types of systems tracks and and of the U. S. Within sequence |
|
62:57 | are bounded by the surfaces and then the strategic Afi it's simply one layer |
|
63:02 | another. And one of the things have to remember is that there's people |
|
63:07 | do sequence photography understand there's a relative advantage to doing sequence photography But they |
|
63:15 | also overlooked the fact that lit the AFI also um relates to uh relative |
|
63:25 | . If you understand the impact of that are laid flat versus layers that |
|
63:32 | be inclined. Some inclination is some inclination is deposition. If you |
|
63:39 | sort that out, let the Strategic works just as well as sequence |
|
63:44 | But sequence ST strategic AFI tries very to define those in relationships ah between |
|
63:52 | that are flat lying and then circumstances when a bed trunk it's up against |
|
63:58 | bed and what that means in terms relative time. And of course uh |
|
64:04 | it's a very uh it's a simple to understand. But until you start |
|
64:12 | it it can it can seem So we're going to be we're going |
|
64:16 | have a a primer on sequence for Europeans. Okay, so um another |
|
64:23 | is biased by demographic correlation. Ah of the things that um John it |
|
64:29 | say and some other people you might ah I believe that it has to |
|
64:37 | with just relative time. But the that we have now with fossil control |
|
64:45 | gotten to the point where you can do geo chronology with bio strata, |
|
64:51 | data and the problem there is this something that's highly neglected these days and |
|
64:58 | are overlooking it in the North When we uh when we drilled |
|
65:03 | I think they're still doing it last I checked was about a year ago |
|
65:09 | they do bio steering instead of geo because the the the fossil assemblages are |
|
65:16 | better for sorting out the various formations they cut through. You know, |
|
65:23 | can come up with a very fine donation of these things. So when |
|
65:27 | well bore goes up like this, sitting up there collecting the returns in |
|
65:33 | it in real time and able to the driller that he's going down in |
|
65:38 | section or he's going up in this . And that's important if you have |
|
65:43 | beds and you're going like this. , you know, everything was exactly |
|
65:48 | flat. Uh If you could figure what your depth is, that would |
|
65:52 | good enough. But you can't because their structure involved in all these |
|
65:58 | Okay. And then faces correlation. a higher resolution thing, but not |
|
66:03 | just faces correlation, but also the geographical spread of faces. Uh |
|
66:14 | know, how widespread, how thick it and how vertically widespread it is |
|
66:21 | a good reservoir is going to be made up of a particular faces. |
|
66:28 | . Even if it's unconventional. And and so you're looking at things within |
|
66:34 | marine setting marginal marine flu ville and Ron. You see different arrangements |
|
66:39 | of these different sand grain piles. whether they're well sorted, not well |
|
66:45 | . uh whether they're the reservoir shaped that they make reservoir bodies like a |
|
66:52 | island core is a long elongate thing to the coast. A distributor harry |
|
66:58 | is usually perpendicular to the coast. these kinds of things are good to |
|
67:02 | when you're trying to find oil and deposits. Okay, this is just |
|
67:09 | example of a little strata. Graphic based on log wells and here you're |
|
67:14 | ticking things across like this. And you can see that this sequence looks |
|
67:23 | much like that sequence which looks very like that sequence. In fact, |
|
67:29 | are exactly the same sequence is Uh This one is shorter than that |
|
67:35 | and shorter than that one. So could say this is closer to the |
|
67:40 | center and this is getting farther and away from the depot center. But |
|
67:47 | we get the same set of logs we have some chronic strata, graphic |
|
67:55 | that sees this. I don't know many times you have to push this |
|
68:03 | get it to work. There we . Yes, but the actual correlation |
|
68:10 | be like this and how would you , to make that correlation on what |
|
68:25 | based on time similarities and demographics. before between the formations. Yeah, |
|
68:34 | a couple of ways. One way bio strata. Graphic data helps you |
|
68:39 | you might find that the top of is the same age as the top |
|
68:43 | that is the same age as the of that is the same age as |
|
68:46 | top of that and then then therefore have these degrading faces where you have |
|
68:54 | to the deepest center. Like this be a barrier bar and you're going |
|
68:59 | or a pro this could be distribute mouth bar getting farther and farther offshore |
|
69:06 | it's getting finer grained but it's all is all at one time unit and |
|
69:11 | this is the next time unit and is the next time unit. And |
|
69:17 | that would be with how would you able to to figure this out with |
|
69:21 | photography? Yes. And believe it not answering stupid questions like this is |
|
69:33 | important for understanding How to use three a two dimensional slices of a three |
|
69:40 | world to figure out what's going on it. So how would how would |
|
69:49 | sort of data set do you think could have with sequence photography that would |
|
69:53 | me see something like this going If you had like a wheeler diagram |
|
70:07 | created a wheeler diagram. Okay with with the bio strategic fee you could |
|
70:12 | a wheeler diagram really well. Ah the sequence photography and this is this |
|
70:20 | strength of sequence strategic graffiti. But if for example you had a bed |
|
70:26 | here, you would have this surface unconfirmable but it's a surface that would |
|
70:34 | getting you'd get a unit that terminates . And the reflectors, you'd have |
|
70:40 | have side, you know, sequence is an offshoot of seismic strategic |
|
70:44 | So you have this two dimensional Slice three dimensional cube or you have a |
|
70:50 | dimensional survey. But you would have reflector down here somewhere or it could |
|
70:56 | up here. But you would see would see these units terminating at an |
|
71:00 | . They'd be they'd be terminating like into it'd be like layers of rocks |
|
71:07 | here that were flat lying and you see layers of rock in the |
|
71:11 | They were like this. Okay. it's not because the mythology is |
|
71:17 | It's because this is oldest and it's more than this, which is older |
|
71:22 | this, which is which is compacted than that. And this is compacted |
|
71:26 | than this one and this one is more than that one. And so |
|
71:29 | see these different reflectors because you're going the rock that's stiffer at each one |
|
71:35 | these boundaries. And and you see termination of the key is this would |
|
71:40 | called lap out. So you have of beds that are lapping out in |
|
71:46 | direction. And of course you could the whole thing on its side and |
|
71:50 | could be lap out that's going up side of a base and it could |
|
71:54 | transgressive. Transgressive ah lap out as to this, which is probably in |
|
72:02 | configuration here would be regressive lap Okay. Does everybody kind of see |
|
72:09 | ? And that's important too to conceptualize because when we're doing three dimensional |
|
72:16 | it's not easy to do. The we have is not As big as |
|
72:21 | . There's like a point here and 10 miles away, there's another point |
|
72:25 | 10 miles away there's another point or might even be just a mile in |
|
72:28 | mile or even half a mile. But the actual amount of data we |
|
72:35 | doesn't help explain all this. What's way that we could see if I |
|
72:40 | back up what's another way that I look at Iraq. That would help |
|
72:46 | see that. It correlates like this think very between the texture. Excuse |
|
72:59 | , correlation between the texture. Um a similar texture indicates. Well, |
|
73:04 | know, the thing is, and happens a lot in nature. You |
|
73:08 | repeated sections because repeating sections is what photography is in the in the world |
|
73:15 | sediments like the principle is a sequence . So, you know, here |
|
73:21 | having that same variation but it's all because you have less accommodation space. |
|
73:26 | you're getting about the same thing. what I was trying to get out |
|
73:28 | hoping you would guess it's okay that didn't uh If you had an |
|
73:36 | you could see this, couldn't Okay. And here's one of the |
|
73:40 | that bothers me about people that actually sequence photography and other types of strategic |
|
73:46 | is that with without the outcrop, looks like the best correlation to |
|
73:57 | right? And without the bio it's a good correlation without sequence |
|
74:07 | But if you have an outcrop, be able to see the beds doing |
|
74:13 | . They're pro grading to the right your page. Ah if you had |
|
74:20 | seismic line in the subsurface, you'd able to see the down lap that's |
|
74:27 | gravitational and our and regressive. And we tilted it on the side and |
|
74:35 | saw that, you would know it transgressive. And and if we had |
|
74:40 | bios photography, you could figure it from the ages. Get all three |
|
74:45 | those things. You'd really understand what system is doing and uh, but |
|
74:50 | people will have a seismic line and they think that it's real simple |
|
74:59 | interpret, but it's not always simple interpret because sometimes just the seismic line |
|
75:04 | not enough to help you see the Allah, jeez, and uh, |
|
75:07 | see what's going on with the seismic with lap out does help an awful |
|
75:12 | for you to see how sequences are being deposited. They're not all layer |
|
75:17 | . But here's another thing. This a three dimensional world. If this |
|
75:23 | a cross section and this is from we have a coastline that goes east |
|
75:29 | and this is sediment programming out to south, right? Kind of like |
|
75:36 | some part of the gulf of Mexico do that. What if I did |
|
75:41 | cross section from here into into the your computer and coming out of the |
|
75:52 | of your computer. In other words that's perpendicular to your computer screen. |
|
75:59 | I was looking at it from this , would it look like this? |
|
76:08 | wouldn't it would look like that because imagine if you had a fence diagram |
|
76:18 | you had this is a fence. is one fence and you have a |
|
76:22 | parallel to that that comes out of screen and you have a fence parallel |
|
76:26 | that that goes back into the And you looked at the units, |
|
76:32 | of these units, this unit would to the one in the back and |
|
76:36 | unit would correlate to the one in back and this one would correlate the |
|
76:39 | in the back. But you wouldn't , you wouldn't see the down lap |
|
76:47 | because if I look I look at on a strike section, they're |
|
76:54 | it's like this this thing of Yeah. They tilt if I tilt |
|
77:00 | paper like this, each sheet of paper, it's like a pro grading |
|
77:08 | . But if I look on the here at the strike, it's just |
|
77:13 | stack of papers that go straight across that. Okay, okay so here |
|
77:22 | have something uh that is just logs you don't have seismic and this is |
|
77:33 | perfect example of what I was getting in terms of? Sometimes we don't |
|
77:37 | the tools to do it. So you have a point and a point |
|
77:41 | a point to point and point. we don't know if this is a |
|
77:47 | de positional dip or if it's across positional strike. And okay, if |
|
77:59 | if this pad of paper uh with page being a layer of rocks, |
|
78:06 | know, it would truncate down here I would have on lap. Excuse |
|
78:12 | down lap But back here all I see back here on this and I |
|
78:18 | just see beds going straight across because is the strike position. This is |
|
78:24 | this is the dip direction of the system. This is deposition will dip |
|
78:30 | way. This is de positional strike way. And uh and trust |
|
78:37 | I'm trying to get you to somewhere I think you're starting to understand |
|
78:41 | So How would you correlate these Well, for one thing you can |
|
78:51 | from the way it's been colored that bed is sort of a baseline or |
|
78:58 | tie point somewhere in the top of logs. And this thing seems to |
|
79:03 | thicker down here and then thinner So we don't have an outcrop mm |
|
79:11 | . We don't have bio strategic graffiti this this is a flu viel system |
|
79:16 | there wouldn't be much useful bios photography we don't have seismic. So what |
|
79:25 | we know about how to correlate this that direction and how to correlate this |
|
79:30 | this direction? How do you do ? You can use the sp or |
|
79:43 | gamma ray on the logs. that's what's happening here. That was |
|
79:50 | , right? And this this is happening here. And they've they've managed |
|
79:55 | tie these. But one of one the things that I'm gonna, when |
|
80:02 | do the log correlation exercise, I'm to try to get you to look |
|
80:04 | the shell rather than the sands. but doing what you said exactly, |
|
80:12 | , you end up with the yellow . Yeah, the yellow sand, |
|
80:16 | yellow sand. But then you have orange, the orange and the |
|
80:18 | But here you have orange, orange, orange and orange. So |
|
80:24 | going on there? What's going on all those wells? Those extra sands |
|
80:34 | not here. The extra sands are here. The extra stands are not |
|
80:39 | , but they're there. Now, where we don't have an outcrop. |
|
80:44 | don't have bio strategic graffiti. We have seismic. We just have |
|
80:53 | It's not this length. It's just point in Iraq like this. A |
|
80:56 | in Iraq? Like this point point . Those wells are just single points |
|
81:01 | the rock? How do we figure what, what is going on in |
|
81:06 | here. That's a tough question to . We need to know the geological |
|
81:16 | of the area to know like if was a valley there or a flooding |
|
81:25 | , that's something caused this section to . Okay. And Angela, |
|
81:30 | you're getting, you're getting really warm uh, and the main point is |
|
81:36 | is that this is when being a is fun because you don't have the |
|
81:44 | labeled in front of you. You to figure out the answer using your |
|
81:50 | of geological concepts and presumably, you this, this is a flu viel |
|
81:59 | . Okay. And there might be wells somewhere. So if you have |
|
82:03 | flu viel system, what would be first thing in mind? That's something |
|
82:08 | a slug of sand in the middle shales. This is all shale. |
|
82:13 | grays are all basically shell down here up here there are a little bit |
|
82:19 | sand, sand units, not really , It's kind of an exaggerated and |
|
82:23 | can see the sand cut off his over here. Ah, but |
|
82:31 | and you can't read this very well . But the, the thing here |
|
82:39 | that you don't know what it is seismic, you don't have bio |
|
82:46 | but you do have your mind and do have geological concepts and since it |
|
82:51 | a flu real system, How about I suggest something for you, what |
|
82:57 | the likelihood of this being some sort flu Viel thing, like a channel |
|
83:05 | belt or a channel itself right in , That would make sense. And |
|
83:14 | that is is you've got these channels in here, they're cutting into the |
|
83:19 | plain here. Uh, not over because the channel is not, they're |
|
83:23 | over here because the channel is not . Because I see multiple layers, |
|
83:27 | could be successive channels within a channel moving around. And you can see |
|
83:32 | a little bit more sand at one here and a little bit more sand |
|
83:36 | than another time there and that sort thing. So it really does look |
|
83:40 | we've got channel switching back and forth me anyway. Well, here's what |
|
83:47 | , the geologists figured out. It this and um, what's going to |
|
83:56 | with these units, They're pinching out actually pinching out this isn't seismic. |
|
84:00 | you don't see the lap out as comes up on the side. But |
|
84:04 | units actually pinch out here, you see at the same point in |
|
84:12 | ah, the shale is pinching out it and this type of pinch out |
|
84:19 | type of top lap there's almost always to be in sequence in strategic |
|
84:27 | It's almost always going to be So it's an erosion will surface and |
|
84:36 | , you can't see it like But you can see that you have |
|
84:41 | time units strata, graphic units that coming here and coming here and when |
|
84:48 | go like that. Mm hmm, pinch out when they hit the channel |
|
84:54 | shells. Now, what do we about shells? Shells are laterally very |
|
84:59 | . But if we correlate with the and we see the shales coming along |
|
85:04 | bingo, there's a sand shells are along bingo, there's a sand shells |
|
85:09 | along, bingo, there's a Likewise, over here. This has |
|
85:14 | be something that's cut down into the and have been created. Bye. |
|
85:22 | sort of channel Ization and I don't what it says down here, but |
|
85:26 | looks like a a definite channel So here you can see non marine |
|
85:35 | stones. In other words, something happened over over here. This |
|
85:43 | be like a clay plug when when the channel was abandoned and it |
|
85:46 | over here and and then this, you get another channel belt moving in |
|
85:54 | direction and another one moving in that . And then here we have it |
|
85:58 | the the channel, this is like bank deposits on the channel through here |
|
86:04 | this sandstone right here. And if I was to do this, I |
|
86:11 | personally not not bring this orange up the way up here. I might |
|
86:15 | turn that all yellow myself and make pretty much a clear cut channel right |
|
86:20 | here. This this is done by group of sequence photographers to try to |
|
86:27 | you that even if you don't have . If you're correlating the shales up |
|
86:34 | these things that are near them, can see that something is missing, |
|
86:38 | faces is missing. But the thickness you see here, we have shales |
|
86:44 | through here, they're almost perfectly We have shales up here that are |
|
86:49 | perfectly flat. And so where santa being deposited here and eroded, there |
|
86:56 | simultaneously already shale in here. So has to be cutting down into something |
|
87:02 | was already there because a channel doesn't deposited in in space, A channel |
|
87:09 | deposited in stuff that's pd contemporaneous to . But older when it cuts down |
|
87:16 | it and so there is no real here and here, there is no |
|
87:21 | change in the strata, graphic thickness this thing. But you can see |
|
87:28 | is a big change in uh, the composition of it from what you |
|
87:32 | in the well lost. And a of times you'll also see a thickening |
|
87:39 | here because it cuts way down into . If you were to do it |
|
87:43 | time, this would be time right . And this interval of time has |
|
87:49 | removed here and these sediments are sitting on top of it, but they |
|
87:53 | into it, they are sitting on of it in the sense of a |
|
87:58 | diagram, but they've cut into it the physical sense, in the vertical |
|
88:07 | . So you're actually looking at four right now In a two dimensional |
|
88:16 | Okay, I I hope that helps little bit. I may, I |
|
88:19 | have just completely confused. But then can take another example like this from |
|
88:24 | book. And uh you can come with multiple ways to correlate these |
|
88:30 | And again, if you know something the area, as Angela pointed |
|
88:39 | you can start using your geological mind coming up with ideas and that's kind |
|
88:44 | what, what the role of a is is to come up with ideas |
|
88:48 | don't seem to have any information supporting until you come up with the idea |
|
88:53 | plotted on top of these charts. so this final models are really a |
|
88:57 | good idea of what happened here. I believe these, yeah, these |
|
89:04 | light bars and it turns out these really bars we've got uh what looks |
|
89:11 | be pro gradation in this direction with title channel that cut into the side |
|
89:17 | one of these things in another But if we just look at this |
|
89:21 | right here right there and you sort of right here, see how |
|
89:27 | have this little feather edge and here don't have the feather edge. But |
|
89:31 | could, we had a student and weren't analytic bars, but they were |
|
89:37 | bars. And the uh I think the tom O'Connor field in Hill corp |
|
89:46 | some acreage in an area that the down dip produced. Bart there was |
|
89:55 | system of plastic barrier islands. So was a new lyric. It was |
|
90:01 | . And one of our graduates this on this and nick noticed that he |
|
90:08 | a series he had about, I they have like about seven or 8 |
|
90:12 | these barrier islands that are pro grading a shiny airplane to the southeast. |
|
90:20 | in every well that he had he see and each one of these |
|
90:24 | you would see a well that had main part of that. Well the |
|
90:29 | like this and there'd usually be on of that. Like what you're seeing |
|
90:34 | in this one, he would see tapering edge. You would see this |
|
90:38 | tapering edge and like in this well another well he would see a tapering |
|
90:44 | . And so he saw it tapering a tape tapering edge. And then |
|
90:48 | was a well that was somewhere about here and forget about this interpretation. |
|
90:54 | there was a well right in And he saw the down dip part |
|
91:00 | this programming bar. And he saw little tiny wedge at the end of |
|
91:09 | up dip end of it sticking out here from another bar. And so |
|
91:15 | this area where they hadn't drilled And , this is a field that was |
|
91:19 | in the 50s, 60s, 70s over a billion barrels of oil I |
|
91:25 | . And so one of one of capstone students in the professional master's |
|
91:32 | He tells his boss. You know I think because I'm seeing this little |
|
91:37 | edge above the farthest south uh athletic . He said, I'm pretty sure |
|
91:45 | another barrier island down here. He he proposed seven wells. They drilled |
|
91:53 | 76 of them came in right on numbers if instead of having a title |
|
92:00 | down here, you had another olympic That after over 50 years of development |
|
92:07 | one had ever discovered. And that's of like doing production geology or development |
|
92:20 | with a twist of exploration in it finding millions of dollars of profit for |
|
92:25 | company for your capstone project. And that was, that was one of |
|
92:31 | of the first really good capstone projects had out of this program. And |
|
92:37 | it helps when you're, you're able work with the company and get data |
|
92:44 | . It also helps when you're in company like hill corp where they let |
|
92:48 | be geologists and uh they let them for oil as it is and they |
|
92:56 | , they've done a very good job the years of of monetizing opportunities and |
|
93:04 | that most people have walked away And when you go into areas like |
|
93:09 | , you often get the acreage for song and uh you pay, you |
|
93:14 | , pennies on the dollar of what original owners or at least the most |
|
93:19 | owners that produced it had to pay it to get that and to do |
|
93:24 | production and that's similar to the Eagle with Floyd C. Wilson, he |
|
93:31 | in for something like $400 an acre he sold it for $10,000 an acre |
|
93:40 | he sent it off to BPH or rather Broken Hill properties. Okay with |
|
93:48 | it's it's been an hour and a . So I think it's pretty much |
|
93:52 | for us to have another break. uh how are you guys feeling? |
|
94:04 | ready for a break. Okay. that or you've already disappeared. |
|
94:10 | Okay. Okay. So well I'm go ahead and pause, not |
|
94:21 | Gonna come way over here on my , we assume recording and there we |
|
94:34 | . Okay now um another thing uh just an example from the North Sea |
|
94:44 | uh it's Parkinson at all in the , late 90's and through the early |
|
94:50 | they they did a lot more work this but they developed a system trying |
|
94:58 | use bio strata graphic data. These to be macro fossil zones that they |
|
95:05 | for the tops of their sequences. um this is just an example of |
|
95:11 | important sequence photography can be in certain of the world uh in in certain |
|
95:19 | and even with like Exxonmobil for Exxon, with Peter vale and the |
|
95:26 | that he worked with, they kind came up with seismic strategic Afi which |
|
95:32 | into sequence photography and a lot of academicians got involved a little bit later |
|
95:39 | . Uh but even at S. . There are parts of s. |
|
95:45 | where the management doesn't see the value sequence photography and um it's not a |
|
95:53 | science but it I think it very helps us understand the development and infill |
|
96:00 | almost every sedimentary basin in the So if you're not doing something that |
|
96:06 | call sequence strategic afi odds are you're something similar two sequence photography because that's |
|
96:12 | the way sediments are deposited. A of students and researchers have done models |
|
96:23 | of building deltas in quick time and and uh sedimentary wedges and that sort |
|
96:31 | thing. And when they set it so they can see it in cross |
|
96:37 | and that kind of thing, it exactly like the theory. So um |
|
96:42 | it's really a hard thing to refute problem is that it's not always that |
|
96:46 | to interpret because when you look at log, How many have you ever |
|
96:51 | a log from the Jurassic that said 62 on it. It's not on |
|
96:59 | . It's not labeled, nothing is on a log. When you get |
|
97:03 | , you have to figure out and what everything is on it. But |
|
97:07 | in these wells they had primarily paloma data that's spores and pollen help them |
|
97:15 | out the ages. They tried to these things to their time honored and |
|
97:26 | macro fossil zones. They're mostly ammonites they're not all ammonites. And most |
|
97:33 | these ammonites come from a more a climate. And uh and so they're |
|
97:48 | really boil realm. They're more from mediterranean and the more warmer water |
|
97:59 | So many of these things don't actually occur here. But the Palin ology |
|
98:04 | ties to it ah down in the basin in those places. There's a |
|
98:12 | for it. I can't think of it is right now for some reason |
|
98:17 | but it's definitely a Technion Technion Captain Realm is much warmer than up |
|
98:27 | . And uh and so it it's but in a way it isn't now |
|
98:37 | what happens when, when we talk sequence photography. one person in particular |
|
98:46 | the University of texas decided that these flooding surfaces that are services that help |
|
98:57 | spot sequences. Normally the maximum flooding in a typical uh genetic sequence of |
|
99:11 | . It would be kind of in middle of the sequence. It would |
|
99:13 | the boundary between the transgressive, you the transgressive surface coming in as a |
|
99:21 | on top of the low stand systems . Then you have another systems track |
|
99:26 | for that called the transgressive systems track when the transgression gets as far as |
|
99:30 | can inland or on laps as far with coastal on lap then you have |
|
99:35 | you call the maximum flooding surface or highest. The sea level was relative |
|
99:40 | the land uh during that sequence. that's sort of in the middle of |
|
99:45 | typical sequence by the Exxon or veil . But but then the fellow from |
|
99:54 | university of texas notice that that's hard recognize and locks. But one thing |
|
100:01 | easy to recognize and logs is that maximum flooding surfaces are also usually maximum |
|
100:10 | terms of radioactive spikes because of the between um organic material, high levels |
|
100:20 | organic material and sediments and the absorption radioactive particles. And so the very |
|
100:29 | stuff like these spikes here with the flooding surfaces. So Bill Galloway |
|
100:38 | Ut decided that he would divide his , not by the low stand events |
|
100:48 | uh the low drops in sea level create evolution Excuse me, erosion of |
|
100:56 | . Big, big drawdown. What decided was that he would pick the |
|
101:01 | flooding surface because he thought he could it on these logs. And and |
|
101:06 | they started using maximum flooding surfaces to the boundaries of sequence. In other |
|
101:13 | , this maximum flooding surface ah would in terms of Galloway Galloway sequence would |
|
101:20 | the base of The J 56 And what this was. And then the |
|
101:27 | of J56 would be the base of 62, which is this next |
|
101:31 | So this this is the maximum flooding and the start of that deposition all |
|
101:38 | . And in some ways it makes because it's talking about the, you |
|
101:46 | , the period of the highest And then going to a point where |
|
101:50 | becomes a period of erosion rather than period of erosion working its way up |
|
101:55 | deposition, which are called genetic And in all cases they are genetic |
|
102:01 | . Because the bounding surfaces that you up with either way, you define |
|
102:08 | sequence ah usually is some kind of flooding surface. That usually is often |
|
102:16 | a flooding surface. And in between things, you also have shales that |
|
102:21 | of separate any sand stones in For example, in this one, |
|
102:28 | got a flooding surface here and flooding here and then you have it could |
|
102:32 | a flooding surface in there, but helps you separate this sandstone from that |
|
102:37 | and not correlate them. In other , they're not in communication because there's |
|
102:40 | lot of sealing shells in between. and that all relates to how sequences |
|
102:46 | deposited ah far up on the shelf and down off the shelf. And |
|
102:53 | it's in different in areas of different of accommodation space. In other |
|
102:59 | how much area do you have to in with sediment? Almost infinite in |
|
103:04 | deep water? 20 up where it's eroded on shore. So, this |
|
103:12 | tool is, is used quite frequently help get an idea of what's going |
|
103:17 | through time. There are caveats to . I won't go into it |
|
103:21 | but perhaps later, I'll get to some of the problems with this |
|
103:27 | But having said that uh it is absolute fact uh that if you can |
|
103:35 | of put the borders on some of sand stones in terms of a sequence |
|
103:40 | the rocks, it helps both in unit ization of stuff and it helps |
|
103:47 | realize that these units are separate from other units. Each one of these |
|
103:53 | called flooding surfaces in here, MFS's flooding surfaces or in some cases they |
|
104:00 | a thing they call a T. uh maximum flooding service, which is |
|
104:07 | tectonic lee enhanced maximum flooding surface. And you know, well when we |
|
104:14 | looking at basins, we'll talk about a little bit more to the difference |
|
104:17 | those two things. But at the of the day, there's a ceiling |
|
104:21 | between this sandstone strata graphically and between one strata graphically. And this is |
|
104:28 | somewhat like a wheeler diagram ah making ammonites zones equal in duration. And |
|
104:40 | one of the caveats of the See here, you know, In |
|
104:47 | of thickness, it varies from 11 these to the next. But in |
|
104:51 | they would all be the same because technician ammonites zones were pegged at a |
|
104:57 | years each. Not because they thought were a million years each, but |
|
105:00 | they had no control over stuff down the Jurassic, once you get around |
|
105:07 | afghan when the atlantic ocean first opened , uh you go from a period |
|
105:14 | time uh that has a continuous rock to one that had a discontinuous rock |
|
105:20 | and the oceans around the world. , Here is um uh some time |
|
105:28 | and you're not meant to be able read this, but here you can |
|
105:32 | cretaceous, there's the Jurassic we were talking about and and then here of |
|
105:38 | is is the permian and the top the paleozoic in the Permian basin has |
|
105:43 | of these pennsylvania things in Permian units in it. This is a |
|
105:48 | system that applies to the entire not just texas or the United States |
|
105:55 | these are what we call stages and are where we we kind of tie |
|
106:01 | rock record to an age globally around world. And in this class we |
|
106:07 | have time enough to to really discuss a lot. But you can see |
|
106:12 | To in many cases to 2nd decimal . They have the dates for the |
|
106:19 | of of Excuse me in this probably the basis of all of the |
|
106:26 | graphic stages. And over here are of the abbreviations and these are the |
|
106:33 | that they see that coincide with a of the stages. Uh, right |
|
106:37 | here. Okay, then, uh at a chart from another University of |
|
106:47 | publication from the gulf of Mexico these charts look really uh in some |
|
106:58 | intimidating. And they also look like must have all the answers, but |
|
107:02 | don't uh, a lot of this put together by the cut and paste |
|
107:08 | . And one of the things that bothers me and a lot of geological |
|
107:16 | , people that don't have any background geo chronology or bio strategic afi or |
|
107:23 | geo chronology. Um they often display conformity is as a line and of |
|
107:32 | , uh in the, well it a line, but in the time |
|
107:36 | and in the stages, it's not line. There's got to be a |
|
107:40 | over here in the rebellion and there's going to be some gaps in in |
|
107:46 | zones over here. They just draw line, but they're not really drawing |
|
107:50 | in the sense of a uh They have a linear scale here, |
|
107:55 | it's not drawn like a wheeler If you have a linear scale, |
|
108:00 | you almost have to have have it a little uh you're gonna have to |
|
108:08 | gaps in a linear scale because these these represent strata. Graphic gaps and |
|
108:13 | not really indicated by the scale that over here on this chart to the |
|
108:20 | . So you can't see all of . But the point is is that |
|
108:25 | is a low stand Systems track coming . And it's got a that's what |
|
108:28 | LST stands for. So this is system of dividing the world up into |
|
108:34 | tracks is uh is pretty prevalent around world. So it's important that you |
|
108:40 | it. It's also important to know everybody that practices sequence photography often has |
|
108:47 | different way of practicing it. And Once every 10 years, I don't |
|
108:52 | they've done it in the last 10 . But Back around 2010 or |
|
108:59 | maybe 11. Help help More than a dozen, probably 18, maybe |
|
109:05 | two dozen sequence photographers try to get and lay down some rules and |
|
109:11 | that didn't go real well, but but it's well enough that people can |
|
109:14 | of understand what people are talking even though they might use slightly different |
|
109:20 | . Okay, another last thing in , uh this particular lecture is just |
|
109:25 | briefly mentioned petroleum. Everyone in here already had except for No, I |
|
109:33 | everybody just had Yeah, everybody except Dennis just had petroleum geology. So |
|
109:40 | not gonna go uh really go into that much except except to point out |
|
109:50 | natural gas, as we know it called petroleum gas in the book. |
|
109:54 | so that might be something I need let you know, and oil is |
|
110:00 | always less dense but more viscous than . And and there is there is |
|
110:10 | uh that can be close to the of water. But does anybody know |
|
110:19 | oil might sink. Like when we an oil spill. Um, Geochemist |
|
110:27 | going to tell you, I can't but oil does think, does anybody |
|
110:31 | why? It stinks and oil we density will probably sink in water. |
|
110:45 | , well there's actually two things going . one of them is sort of |
|
110:50 | when you have water. When you oil on the surface of water, |
|
110:55 | being oxidized and the volatiles are going very quickly. So the light part |
|
110:59 | the oil of the actual crude oil turning into a thicker and a thicker |
|
111:06 | denser and denser bit of sludge and lot of that as such will not |
|
111:14 | . But if for example, you dispersants on it at the wellhead when |
|
111:19 | have a leak, it turns into tiny drops and those little tiny drops |
|
111:26 | become greater surface area for bacteria to . But more importantly, if there's |
|
111:32 | storm and there's turbidity in the the clay particles that are in the |
|
111:39 | column will attach or flock relate to oil droplets and all of a sudden |
|
111:44 | oil droplet which has a density less one. All of a sudden has |
|
111:49 | density of somewhere around 1.5 to 2 on what kind of clay particles and |
|
111:54 | many clay particles attached to it and it definitely will start to sink. |
|
112:00 | that's what happened with the Macondo oil . They were dispersing the oil at |
|
112:05 | at the wellhead had a tube that shooting right into it. It was |
|
112:09 | into instead of big masses of it was turning into bubbles of |
|
112:14 | And the minute you break it up that uh the bacteria can act on |
|
112:20 | and then clay particles can cause it sink and so sometimes oil can sink |
|
112:27 | uh but then even in um even the oil column you can get a |
|
112:33 | amount of separation of the volatiles from heavier ends of the cruise. And |
|
112:39 | can get something where it's where it's to the density of water. But |
|
112:43 | of the water that we see in , it's going to be denser than |
|
112:47 | freshwater and because it has a lot salt in it. Okay. Uh |
|
112:55 | chemistry of petroleum is extremely complex, for those that just took dr posadas |
|
113:02 | . And uh some of the things are worth noting would be the North |
|
113:09 | Brent benchmark crude and what it And so that's listed here. That's |
|
113:13 | in your in your book I And uh uh in contrast to |
|
113:20 | one of some of the oils in L. A. Basin actually needs |
|
113:25 | be heated before it will flow. these light, sweet crudes oftentimes in |
|
113:34 | sweet low and sulfur ah are often good things for producing gasoline. And |
|
113:44 | one thing to always remember is the the number the lighter and less dense |
|
113:49 | uh this is the formula in your . And it's a pretty simple |
|
113:54 | And it's relative to specific gravity. And uh and you can come up |
|
114:04 | a with a number here at 60 and figure out exactly what it |
|
114:10 | So, essentially, uh the specific of one equals 10 Ap i if |
|
114:18 | do the calculation because you go from 141, 231 And you end up |
|
114:25 | a 10 subtracting 10 from it. that would be the density of |
|
114:30 | And then ah since it a. . I. Is since it's less |
|
114:38 | , you're gonna get a bigger and number and the api number is going |
|
114:41 | go up. Okay. Um This is a really strange thing, but |
|
114:50 | texas intermediate is a. P. very close to uh North sea |
|
114:55 | So they're often comparable crude oils and texas intermediate is also sweet. And |
|
115:04 | refineries over in europe because of the Sea. Uh I find it very |
|
115:13 | sometimes you might get involved in but it's very useful to export West |
|
115:19 | intermediate to europe because their refineries are to take uh to their refineries are |
|
115:28 | to refine oil that's around 38 p. I said 39 is not |
|
115:35 | just a little bit lighter. And I'm not sure why they call it |
|
115:42 | because Anything greater than 22 is Anything Uh excuse me, less than |
|
115:50 | is heavy? Anything greater than 41 light? And then that range in |
|
115:55 | . There is, that's pretty much you would be calling medium or |
|
116:01 | So that may have something to do it, but it's definitely on the |
|
116:03 | end of medium, uh, which don't know if I would call something |
|
116:11 | if it's on the high end of . But uh, Most unconventional oil |
|
116:18 | lighter and above 45 a. i. And uh, and that |
|
116:22 | also something to do with that that reduces the viscosity in many |
|
116:29 | not all, but it also would it to where the relative permeability would |
|
116:35 | less different from the other fluids, the fact that it's, it's, |
|
116:43 | getting to a lower api but it's still, it's still not gonna flow |
|
116:47 | fastly. The relative permeability is still to be lower than water or natural |
|
116:55 | . And uh, I think I this out earlier. Many of the |
|
116:59 | coast refineries adopted adapted to Venezuelan crudes also sin fuels coming from Canada and |
|
117:09 | have really low ap eyes. And , and so the refineries are built |
|
117:18 | operate a little bit different than the that are designed for this. So |
|
117:21 | kind of a really good thing that able to export west texas, intermediate |
|
117:28 | europe because it's the oil that they ? No, why build more |
|
117:32 | If you're trying to be efficient in economy and be efficient in your |
|
117:37 | why would you want to have to extra refineries when we're trying to get |
|
117:42 | from that sort of thing? So people want to block exploitation of this |
|
117:50 | just to try to get rid of in total. But it's not really |
|
117:55 | our energy problem when we when we to the conditions that we have right |
|
118:00 | with those kinds of responses. Um I won't go into all |
|
118:08 | Uh but this one of the things that I want to point out |
|
118:17 | I guess these things in yellow and that some of the complex molecules can |
|
118:26 | used as biomarkers and they help. hopefully dr basada explains some of those |
|
118:31 | you. Some of them will tell . For example, it's Mhm. |
|
118:36 | oil from pd Astra. Um or uh that's one of the freshwater |
|
118:43 | And there's also um Patria kaka's brown , which is something that's everywhere for |
|
118:52 | all the time. It's an amorphous and uh might even be called a |
|
118:59 | now for all I know, but a or a brown type of |
|
119:06 | But patrick Takis brown eye. Uh very lipid rich and it's easily converts |
|
119:13 | oil when you heat it. And uh when some of these Dina flag |
|
119:20 | the marine ones and battery Caucus get in the rock record? Um you'll |
|
119:26 | a mass for the battery caucus because kind of an amorphous for the Dina |
|
119:32 | , they have a thick on the that's very resistant to any type of |
|
119:40 | . You can't dissolve it with there's no asset on earth that will |
|
119:43 | it. So it's insoluble. But material inside will start to turn the |
|
119:50 | rich parts of it inside of We'll start to turn to oil and |
|
119:54 | get little sort of jets or filaments come out of it that actually are |
|
119:59 | um ready to ready to produce And they call them petrol IQ |
|
120:06 | So it's interesting if you go to museums or listen to stuff on Tv |
|
120:12 | or whatever. A lot of people say things like we don't know exactly |
|
120:17 | the oil comes from. But you're dr posadas class, you're probably well |
|
120:22 | that he knows exactly where every drop from. And it's usually it's usually |
|
120:28 | to be plant material and uh which the way, so is cole which |
|
120:35 | the way is why agriculture is a growing vegetables is not getting us away |
|
120:42 | the carbon footprint problems. And uh so that's interesting. But some of |
|
120:50 | of course some of the animals that also have lipids in them and all |
|
120:57 | aren't the same. But certain ones that are in in animals can also |
|
121:01 | converted into oil like substances as But it's going to be much smaller |
|
121:09 | and less, less volumes. You imagine an ocean covered with algae raining |
|
121:16 | to the sea floor is going to a lot more material than a few |
|
121:21 | running by Aldo. Those whales provide lot and were the source of a |
|
121:26 | of the oil in the original scheme things in the seventies, in the |
|
121:30 | hundreds and 17 hundreds, for if not earlier in terms of producing |
|
121:37 | for oil lamps and stuff like Um another thing is uh the these |
|
121:46 | molecules when they do a gas chromatograph other different analytical methods, they can |
|
121:52 | of fingerprint the compounds based on the of certain of these carbon rich molecules |
|
122:04 | and get a really good handle on where that crew came from versus where |
|
122:08 | crew came from. And again, basada was good at. He could |
|
122:14 | tell that. I don't I never at his research but he did comment |
|
122:23 | just through the process of migration, actual composition of the oil from one |
|
122:33 | one reservoir to the next has changed slightly. So, and you could |
|
122:38 | tell whether you have separate reservoirs in cases and long term migration, which |
|
122:43 | discussed down here longer trips of we know for sure, can can |
|
122:53 | , because a lot of differences in cases bio degradation through time, we'll |
|
123:01 | it heavier, but also through time it rises to the surface, the |
|
123:06 | might separate and move faster and you get a separated oil column through, |
|
123:14 | , a transit formation that's porous and it charges, it might be charging |
|
123:21 | um uh a lower api gravity at lowest levels and a higher one as |
|
123:28 | go up. And of course that to face the evils of further thermal |
|
123:36 | . But when you look at some the Pleistocene deposits in, in the |
|
123:43 | of Mexico, where there's large, faults up against shale masses or salt |
|
123:50 | appears. It's almost as though at point in time the when that major |
|
123:57 | moved, it created a conduit for a perfect, perfectly segregated mass of |
|
124:06 | from lightest, actually, natural two very light oil to very heavy |
|
124:13 | from one formation to the next. I worked in a field that looked |
|
124:15 | like that. And so that kind thing can happen to. So there's |
|
124:18 | lot of, a lot of ways composition can be ah, can be |
|
124:25 | from one point to the next in oil column, depending on what goes |
|
124:29 | now in the in the luau Again, uh I mentioned bio degradation |
|
124:40 | , uh not only consumed the but it also broke down some of |
|
124:45 | heavier compounds as it was going through a legacy in conduit from the kitchen |
|
124:51 | the reservoir. And uh and that's it ended up having less viscosity than |
|
124:57 | normally would get for a 19 degree grab oil. And with that we're |
|
125:04 | to finish that. So basically we've through Not every page of Chapter |
|
125:10 | but a lot of the material that's in Chapter one plus a few other |
|
125:14 | based on on my experiences and will professional. And I guess I |
|
125:22 | could point out, I wasn't management . So that usually means you don't |
|
125:25 | what you're talking about. But I I was actually not a very good |
|
125:32 | because I couldn't stop working. I , I didn't want to travel a |
|
125:37 | and all that. I wanted to more oil and gas because if the |
|
125:42 | finds oil and gas then you're gonna a job longer. Okay. And |
|
125:48 | did work in a time when the of the oil for the most part |
|
125:52 | going up. There was there was couple of spots where it was |
|
125:57 | Let's see. I don't want to those changes. That was when I |
|
126:04 | the diagram around. Sure that's not I wanted. Okay. Can everybody |
|
127:12 | everything? So the next thing we're to look at is heterogeneous nature of |
|
127:25 | rocks and of course uh we know are sedimentary rocks wide. Um they |
|
127:42 | eroded, transported, deposited and compact identified. What was that last |
|
127:50 | you used on compacted and notified. , liquefied. But what what really |
|
127:57 | us know that there are sedimentary rocks uh that they're stratified. Okay, |
|
128:06 | sedimentary rocks are stratified. So somewhat in what rock, the source |
|
128:17 | igneous material, uh, would possibly a sedimentary rock sort of directly |
|
128:30 | not by erosion, but by There's 1, 1 particular thing that |
|
128:44 | classified often as a sedimentary deposit, has to do with volcanic six. |
|
128:57 | sorry, sorry with that question. , it was, uh, |
|
129:04 | there's one, there's one type there's one source of sedimentary rocks to |
|
129:08 | sort of, uh, doesn't seem be typical and it's, it's not |
|
129:15 | plastic, it's not, uh, or carbonate enriched volcanic ash. |
|
129:29 | volcanic plastic. So volcanic plastic sediments the ash beds. In fact, |
|
129:36 | probably ash beds in this sedimentary series of rocks. This is it |
|
129:43 | point in Utah and no accidents in . And, and it's, we |
|
129:51 | in Utah when we flew back and to this or drove to it in |
|
129:56 | outcrop down the road from here. this is Green river formation in |
|
130:06 | Okay. Um, here's something that think it's worth thinking about it and |
|
130:13 | , when people started producing from I got accused of being and this |
|
130:22 | back in, um, it must been, I don't know, maybe |
|
130:32 | or five, something like that. was talking about potential unconventional resources being |
|
130:41 | an incredible boom. And people looked me like I was kind of an |
|
130:48 | . And, but, but knowing going on in in geology, I |
|
130:53 | anybody could have sorted it out and there's something that's really interesting about uh |
|
131:01 | exploration, prior to us looking at . And uh these are kind of |
|
131:09 | little diagrams, but you know, crustal volume of course is mostly |
|
131:14 | but land surface area is mostly sedimentary you can see from these cross sections |
|
131:21 | it is that way? Here's a here, here's a big basin over |
|
131:25 | . These are different types of but they're sedimentary wedges or basins as |
|
131:30 | is. So sedimentary rocks By volume just 5% of the upper press, |
|
131:37 | 75% of the area. And often the only uh record of geological events |
|
131:46 | can be timed on a the precise accurate basis. You can get dates |
|
131:54 | of igneous rocks, but just by nature of igneous rocks and the fact |
|
132:00 | they're not everywhere makes it a little more difficult to get long term understanding |
|
132:06 | , of the timing of a lot igneous and metamorphic rocks, uh |
|
132:14 | Okay. And these things are defined composition, texture and structure as you |
|
132:20 | know. And and we kind of through a little bit, we mentioned |
|
132:29 | little bit about composition and but we talking about size, which is texture |
|
132:38 | then structure sedimentary structures or something we talked about, but the but porosity |
|
132:47 | permeability are controlled by all of these and composition can often make you shut |
|
132:55 | door. Mhm. Maybe driving my crazy. Uh But all of these |
|
133:06 | , you know, it just seems , you know this is a textbook |
|
133:09 | . Why do we care about texture and structure? Oh yeah, |
|
133:13 | use this to try to figure out the name of Iraq is. |
|
133:16 | Yeah. Yeah. So what but you get down to it, composition |
|
133:22 | an impact on porosity and permeability, has a has an impact on porosity |
|
133:27 | permeability and structure does as well. uh structure has a whole lot to |
|
133:34 | with anisotropy of flow uh in in rock mass. So sedimentary structures are |
|
133:42 | important. And so just briefly what what is one of the reasons why |
|
133:49 | is important? Well um you know two different types of origins things from |
|
133:56 | consolidation of you know uh originates material breaks down into clays and and silt |
|
134:05 | sand stones and then there's also the slash biochemical precipitates. You know, |
|
134:13 | been uh studying geology unfortunately for a time perhaps, but but one of |
|
134:23 | funny things. So why get this all the time? Ah Sorry, |
|
134:30 | of the funny things about, let get this on and it won't do |
|
134:39 | . One of the big funny things you know, we used to just |
|
134:43 | these carbonates and these plastics. But it turns out some of the carbonates |
|
134:53 | our plastics to so you have to to originates plastics, you know um |
|
134:59 | lights for example are plastics. Those are plastic particles. And uh and |
|
135:05 | you have to be in and more than that, broken up pieces of |
|
135:12 | are plastic, but it's still a . And uh and new lights and |
|
135:17 | seashells are actually biochemical plastics. you know, people felt like, |
|
135:27 | we need to we need to separate out. So we so we went |
|
135:32 | plastics to carbonates to to originates plastics chemical. And then later on, |
|
135:39 | lot of research looked at a lot things that precipitate out of the water |
|
135:45 | . The precipitation is actually mediated or , bye bye bacterial activity. So |
|
135:54 | even things that we often think our precipitates just by the process of concentration |
|
136:04 | in the real world and in the record have a lot of biochemical interactions |
|
136:10 | actually make it happen and happen faster slower in some cases. And of |
|
136:17 | if you dissolve salt in a pot you boil the water off. I'm |
|
136:25 | sure that is chemical. But the is you now have chemical or biochemical |
|
136:31 | not just carbonates and plastics. So it's it's gone a long way from |
|
136:37 | things are. So the more we , the more complicated this all gets |
|
136:42 | uh and here's like carbonates and but again, some of some of |
|
136:47 | things, some of the carbonates to out are not just evaporates. |
|
136:56 | Um so uh the major types of rocks are often based on their sizes |
|
137:09 | in some cases the shape, conglomerate Brescia and sandstone, things are sandstone |
|
137:18 | shales uh are gonna be uh things are below sandstone, but there solicit |
|
137:29 | and and they're all they're usually going be Michelle is usually going to be |
|
137:35 | grain clay sized particles and to get that, I'm not sure why I |
|
137:42 | it in this order, but it be sandstone, silt stone, shale |
|
137:46 | mud stone would be a combination of and sandstone. Mud stone is everything |
|
137:52 | the grains are less than the size sandstone and of course the shale and |
|
137:56 | silt stones ah Are two separate one silt in one shale. Whether |
|
138:02 | not you get these things together often pretty unlikely. one of the things |
|
138:09 | that when I was doing water chemistry in the atlantic ocean, we were |
|
138:16 | also in turbidity and we're we uh would pull sediments, we'd we'd pull |
|
138:24 | the water and get the sediment in floating in the water out and we'd |
|
138:32 | it in these samples and yes, flock, you're late, all the |
|
138:38 | particles and we have lots of So we have all this clay sized |
|
138:43 | and other things, things that are 4.5 microns and less, But then |
|
138:48 | had a Coulter counter and we would the seawater and run it through this |
|
138:54 | and this would have a displacement of saltwater solution that it was going through |
|
139:00 | aperture. And it was, the it was, the greater the resistive |
|
139:05 | to electrical flow would be. And as these particles were flowing through that |
|
139:13 | aperture that had conductive material in the connectivity was high. A little |
|
139:21 | would drop it just a little bit bigger property would drop the conductivity |
|
139:27 | So the reason activity would be going as a size winner. And so |
|
139:30 | were able to do really good sand . Excuse me. Uh particle size |
|
139:36 | . Not with a laser but with . And so we ran this and |
|
139:42 | we found with natural seawater. So almost never find clay particles by themselves |
|
139:49 | particles. They're like tiny little looking for other tiny little magnets and |
|
139:55 | stick together right away. and the particles we ever found were 19 |
|
140:01 | which would be a silt stone. they but those particles when you broke |
|
140:07 | down, they were clay sized particles in nature there are always flow |
|
140:12 | They always were more than one And it's something interesting uh that I've |
|
140:19 | on that that you might be interested understanding because there really is no true |
|
140:26 | Superfine grain shale sediment being deposited is deposited as flock tools that are silt |
|
140:34 | , made out of clay sized Okay. Um then when we look |
|
140:40 | that size, then when we look the major minerals, one of the |
|
140:47 | things about being a sedimentary geologist is don't have to learn a whole bunch |
|
140:52 | minerals or understand that um something that's on this list. That is important |
|
140:58 | , is is uh is going to appetite, which is precipitated fast |
|
141:08 | calcium, phosphate. And and and important because phosphate is what helps generate |
|
141:18 | in the water column by by by the algae. Ah some of the |
|
141:24 | limiting elements to life are phosphorus, and carbon. Excuse me, |
|
141:33 | nitrogen and and uh ah jeez, , I guess I'm getting tired. |
|
141:44 | it's carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. so so when you nitrogen is pretty |
|
141:52 | in seawater and you can imagine carbon too. So the real limiting the |
|
141:58 | limiting thing quite often as prosperous in of algal production. And that's what |
|
142:05 | ideas since. And that's why that an important thing to understand in lake |
|
142:10 | . Okay, so and then there's one not here that's often seen in |
|
142:18 | and that's Glock tonight, that's sort a garbage can of of clay minerals |
|
142:27 | you see quite often and then there's minerals in of course green Micah's and |
|
142:37 | why do you think the heavy minerals be really important in terms of sedimentary |
|
142:54 | . So I'm just going to make guess what I know every minerals have |
|
143:00 | A. P. I Hi radio . And when measured with the so |
|
143:07 | relating it to because I also have A. P. I. So |
|
143:12 | sp logs they might correlate. Oh sorry. Yeah. You're you're trying |
|
143:20 | trying I understand where you're trying to but it's not working. But uh |
|
143:26 | there's probably more significant things about it I'm what I'm going to tell |
|
143:30 | But one of the things heavy minerals sometimes easy to pick out of a |
|
143:35 | sample. So they can be used figuring out the different sources of sand |
|
143:42 | to get the positive. For example the beach, For example, the |
|
143:45 | minerals in in 11 stream coming to ocean might be richer in in |
|
143:52 | depending on the distance, heavy minerals make it very far down the |
|
143:57 | But if like on the east Coast see lots of heavy minerals on the |
|
144:02 | because the mountain ranges weren't that far . And so so they can't have |
|
144:08 | to do with figuring out the source the sediments when you're when you're looking |
|
144:14 | sedimentary systems in the recent. Another that they're useful for is that if |
|
144:20 | have heavy minerals in your in your a beach system or a river |
|
144:26 | they're a little bit denser than the . So quite often when uh level |
|
144:34 | energy that's moving sands, it kind slows down. The first thing that |
|
144:38 | out is going to be a thin of the heavy minerals. And then |
|
144:41 | start getting the quartz grains of the size but slightly less heavy because they're |
|
144:48 | same size but they're not as And so when we see laminate obvious |
|
144:55 | bedding laminate ah from complex Ripples, three dimensional ripples and sometimes pro grading |
|
145:07 | say on a point bar or something programming sands, cycles of pro grading |
|
145:13 | or degrading sands whether it's moving forward just up along the beach. If |
|
145:20 | have heavy minerals in there, you see laminate if you go to the |
|
145:25 | of Mexico where most of the sand come from a long way off. |
|
145:36 | Either the Appalachians and or depending on you're at or in some cases the |
|
145:42 | US mountain ranges via the Mississippi and of the, some of the shorter |
|
145:51 | , like like the ones that drain texas. Ah they're already reworking |
|
146:00 | So, so there's, so the level of this stuff they start out |
|
146:04 | is already pretty high. So make long story short, most of the |
|
146:09 | grains that make it to the coast texas, the heavy minerals are long |
|
146:16 | . And so when you trench, got to be disappointing for anybody |
|
146:23 | from the east coast to come in in a a beach deposit along the |
|
146:31 | coast because you can't see laminate because no heavy minerals to show you the |
|
146:36 | , you can't see the little different positional episodes. It laid it down |
|
146:41 | things and I don't have any in series. I don't think I might |
|
146:45 | you some. Uh but when I to teach this to two engineers who |
|
146:51 | no geology background, I showed them of examples of rocks from these sediments |
|
146:57 | these. Because so you could see the laminate and the sedimentary structures were |
|
147:00 | . And of course those laminate, sense of oil, uh you |
|
147:06 | you know, particles all of a side size. But then you have |
|
147:10 | heavy minerals that through the little fication , we're going to break down and |
|
147:16 | minute barriers between between the laminate. depending on which way they were, |
|
147:23 | ripples were pro grading and with the and when the heavy minerals were set |
|
147:29 | , you'll see a series of laminate which are rich in minerals that will |
|
147:36 | cemented up with iron for example, and other compounds pretty quickly upon |
|
147:45 | And they can turn something that looks a nice clean sandstone uh into something |
|
147:52 | has a lot of minute barriers internally of it. And that that affects |
|
147:57 | your processing permeability to. Okay, of course we're just kind of talking |
|
148:03 | cement and iron oxide minerals are big basically when they come to the |
|
148:11 | They like to precipitate. So you get get stuff precipitating out pretty |
|
148:19 | And uh forming uh beach carbonates and sorts of things. If enough heat |
|
148:29 | . Just because the saw liability of carbonate drives off when it gets |
|
148:36 | It's really high. It's kind of reverse thing because of ph In in |
|
148:42 | and in in c. 0. . But the but when the very |
|
148:50 | deepwater stuff from the tongue of the uh Super sad. It becomes supersaturated |
|
148:56 | as the current brings it up over of the banks, the tongue of |
|
149:00 | ocean and the Bahamas. Uh And get those massive deposits of of lights |
|
149:05 | the calcium carbonate is just precipitating attaches onto something starts rolling and you |
|
149:13 | all sorts of you light production and types of of the beach carbonates and |
|
149:18 | like that happening just because you have super saturated source of calcium enriched calcium |
|
149:26 | enriched cold deep sea water coming up a shallow warm area where the soluble |
|
149:33 | actually drops off. It's one of few things that that works that |
|
149:38 | And it also has a little bit do with with why it's it's easier |
|
149:43 | some mm hmm marine things to actually calcium carbonate along with the Zosen Felli |
|
149:53 | are in the coral, you have high saturation relative to the Saudi ability |
|
149:59 | it easier for them to to pull calcium carbonate out and to make their |
|
150:04 | framework carbonates that we call corals and things like that. So that's carbonates |
|
150:14 | really um one of the most unpredictable to in the rock record because in |
|
150:21 | class and the trendiness plastics, we of look for faces that have uh |
|
150:31 | primary porosity. In other words, formed that deposition and as it gets |
|
150:36 | , you start to lose that effective porosity and permeability through various processes |
|
150:44 | de watering uh compaction, which changes arrangement of the grains and sometimes the |
|
150:52 | of the grains has an impact. the sorting of the grain sizes can |
|
150:57 | an impact. But to make a story short, the plastics typically can |
|
151:07 | , you can it serves you well search for hi primary porosity faces when |
|
151:15 | dealing with with plastic rocks that you're for in terms of a reservoir. |
|
151:21 | you're looking for a carbonate reservoir, kind of the opposite. What are |
|
151:26 | looking for when we, when we to find a good reservoir in a |
|
151:37 | , Do we want something that's a like, like a sandstone? Almost |
|
151:41 | little spherical balls? Or do we something else? In other words, |
|
151:53 | we looking for good primary ferocity or we looking for perhaps secondary porosity in |
|
152:05 | ? It could be both. absolutely. It can be both. |
|
152:09 | that's that's one of the reasons why complicated. It's just like the example |
|
152:15 | was explaining about the chalks. The process. It was preserved by early |
|
152:22 | or charge of oil into the But but basically for indigenous classics, |
|
152:32 | if you have primary ferocity, that's the best ferocity is going to be |
|
152:37 | as it's being deteriorated as it gets through time. But with carbonates it |
|
152:43 | flip flop a lot. And and of the the worst things about |
|
152:52 | this carbonate cement is one of the ones to move and easiest ones to |
|
152:58 | . And so it's it's highly reactive uh and uh it doesn't take a |
|
153:05 | to either dissolve it of course once dissolve it then it becomes mobilized. |
|
153:08 | it's mobilized it can get super saturated precipitate somewhere else. But a lot |
|
153:15 | the big fields that we found in world that are carbonates have good secondary |
|
153:21 | as opposed to good primary porosity. you're absolutely right. You do, |
|
153:26 | do and like even in the talks get good primary porosity. But it's |
|
153:33 | in my mind it's a it's it's of, it's a wild card. |
|
153:39 | although it's it's a limited wild card it could be primary or secondary. |
|
153:47 | but it's very hard to predict. think sometimes exactly what you're gonna get |
|
153:53 | the luau structure was discovered in in the south china sea, the the |
|
154:04 | reservoir as it turns out did have porosity uh it was a location for |
|
154:11 | , primary ferocity, but most of primary porosity was destroyed. And but |
|
154:16 | couldn't predict that ahead of time that would end up being that way. |
|
154:21 | it's only after we we found it we're able to get samples and look |
|
154:25 | it closely in thin section that we out. You know, what |
|
154:28 | really caused it. And the 1 of the reasons why I like |
|
154:33 | with plastics is because there's there's, a better element of predictability is basically |
|
154:40 | , you know, carbonates are neat and complicated but sedimentary rocks in terms |
|
154:47 | processing and permeability, I think are the most part more predictable. And |
|
154:52 | think that's a big difference between working carbonate reservoirs and and also plastics and |
|
155:03 | you know, some of the biggest in the world are are carbonated, |
|
155:07 | hmm, buggy carbonate deposits. Um, and I hope I didn't |
|
155:17 | you by saying that about carbonates. , I've got nothing against anybody that |
|
155:23 | them because everybody likes going to the where you have carbonates. But but |
|
155:31 | just as a, as a, know, uh, subsurface geology is |
|
155:36 | complicated. You know, if I , if I can eliminate predictability, |
|
155:41 | like to do that. And if I worked for an oil company and |
|
155:45 | a high position in it, I try to be in charge of the |
|
155:50 | reservoirs and not to carbonate reservoirs. so it would be it to be |
|
155:55 | easier job, I think. so anyway we get all these rock |
|
156:01 | and that are in there, we all these different types of cement and |
|
156:06 | all break down into sizes and it a lot to do all of |
|
156:12 | this has to do with the creation destruction of cement really because you have |
|
156:19 | dissolve something somewhere uh to have the to precipitate and create a cement. |
|
156:26 | a lot of times ah in the early stages of cement ation, you |
|
156:32 | get to a point of dissolution of of those elements so that they can |
|
156:37 | in in the Konate water and concentrate then become cements. And this is |
|
156:46 | a thin section showing you some of stages of of the things that can |
|
156:58 | with burial and you can get some desks that turns into smoke tight rims |
|
157:04 | then chlorate rims and you hydrochloride and you get the poor that's completely filled |
|
157:10 | here you can see some quartz which takes a good burial depth to |
|
157:16 | to two for that to start And so there's a lot going on |
|
157:21 | this section. Just just an example many different ways these courts grains that |
|
157:27 | here like this one right here are getting these different types of rims and |
|
157:36 | and and other things that are the is the porosity. So you can |
|
157:42 | as any of these courts overgrowth ah I can't quite see that there's some |
|
157:50 | he'd rel things growing in here and things maybe smaller grains or whatnot be |
|
157:59 | compacted into the ferocity space support So you're losing a lot of stuff |
|
158:04 | time. And here is the types chemical sedimentary rocks. The limestone is |
|
158:13 | church, the assaults the church now The church unfortunately when you get below |
|
158:22 | ft many of them we'll go into . That form of course is more |
|
158:32 | to going into solution and that can a lot of cements and one of |
|
158:42 | one of the things diatoms for example kind of related to this uh this |
|
158:49 | of silica and At about 5000 ft depending on the geothermal gradient typically will |
|
159:03 | to dissolve and go into solution at same time. You start to see |
|
159:07 | lot of courts over gross and courts performing in in reservoirs. So a |
|
159:16 | of what we like to see in oil industry is is a sedimentary rock |
|
159:21 | to be charged. The love before goes below 5000 ft. And and |
|
159:28 | and then you can include the the you rich fluids from getting in there |
|
159:35 | creating cements and depositing them because when oil is in there and the fluids |
|
159:40 | get in uh that have the salutes them. You're not gonna get cemented |
|
159:46 | petroleum systems. Excuse me, reservoir and of course we have our favorite |
|
159:54 | and uh how many of you know trona is? Well, I can |
|
160:04 | you a story about trona. Uh we might want to move along, |
|
160:10 | I went to a train of mine in the Green River basin because we're |
|
160:16 | to, this is sort of in middle of the base. And and |
|
160:20 | is one of the precipitates that comes of, it's almost like the salt |
|
160:26 | a bicarbonate enriched lake system. And bicarbonate rich lake system ah by nature |
|
160:37 | the by carbon, carbon, it grabs calcium when it comes into the |
|
160:45 | and and it prevents calcium phosphate from . So phosphorus is allowed to stay |
|
160:52 | the system. So the mineral if you see big deposits of the |
|
160:56 | trona, you'll know that you're in lake basin that has a high propensity |
|
161:02 | the production of source rock material. simply because it's going to keep the |
|
161:10 | in the water column rather than precipitating out and bearing it. And you |
|
161:18 | what this is called? In in kitchen. This gets mind and big |
|
161:28 | . So people can put it in yellow boxes, baking powder, it's |
|
161:38 | soda, baking powder has baking soda it, but baking, it's it's |
|
161:43 | baking soda and Armand hammer knows all it. Mhm. Okay. Um |
|
161:54 | thing that composition doesn't have talked about a little bit, it adds to |
|
161:59 | us an idea of the source area the sediment. So we know where |
|
162:01 | source of the sediments are. We of know uh what kind of basin |
|
162:08 | might have down dip and again, mentioned that in conventional reservoirs and exploration |
|
162:18 | expedition, we look outside of the sometimes to figure out what's going to |
|
162:22 | in it. And that's particularly true it's plastic deposition, all systems. |
|
162:28 | it's carbonate deposition, all systems, doesn't have to be uh um extrinsic |
|
162:38 | the to the base of itself because in the basin. And so the |
|
162:44 | that actually forms the sediments in many in carbonate system are actually occurring right |
|
162:49 | in the basin itself. So that's big distinction between heterogeneous plastics and chemical |
|
162:58 | and biochemical sediments and uh the the can have an impact on what the |
|
163:07 | environment is and and also ah possible genetic trends if you have certain |
|
163:19 | heavy minerals and in different types of spars, you're definitely going to have |
|
163:24 | immature rock. And that immature rock going to likely have more issues in |
|
163:30 | of plays pathogenic plays and also different of rims and cement is forming on |
|
163:41 | grains inside your inside your pores and pore throats. So that can be |
|
163:46 | big issue and feldspar as can be you want to do an acid job |
|
163:52 | a um well, most of the they used reacts violently with certain felt |
|
164:00 | . It turns into a gel and will completely destroy your the formation all |
|
164:10 | a perforation and whatnot. If if you try to do an acid |
|
164:13 | with a lot of feldspar is in , in the rocks. Okay, |
|
164:18 | is just looking at ferocity based on and depth and for all things with |
|
164:29 | . This is a good general diagram give everyone an idea of how things |
|
164:33 | , but at the same time, not totally accurate. Uh, in |
|
164:38 | cases, there's there's many exceptions to of this, but in general, |
|
164:46 | , quartz grains, sand stones um going to be very, very resistant |
|
164:53 | less likely than something that would have in it. That's not made out |
|
164:58 | courts. And so some of these empathic and lipstick sand stones are going |
|
165:06 | have other types of minerals in them that are more amenable to breaking down |
|
165:15 | turning into two author jenny clays and um and different types of cement and |
|
165:26 | felt empathic ones are pretty bad. the lipstick ones are going to have |
|
165:30 | spars and a lot of other things could be worse. And the lipstick |
|
165:34 | are less broken down. So you're have a wider variety. I think |
|
165:39 | sizes. So the sorting would probably to be a little bit more variable |
|
165:45 | , sandstone than it would be. pathetic. But again, the best |
|
165:51 | going is quartz, sand stones and one of the things to realize is |
|
166:02 | of course this is all compaction. you can get in carbonate, you |
|
166:09 | get early dia genesis. But in these classics you get compaction indeed what |
|
166:16 | going on? And you get, would guess probably somewhere around here, |
|
166:22 | start to get a lot more compaction above here. Um and the depth |
|
166:28 | be even less, but on continental . I've also noticed time has an |
|
166:34 | on this too, not just um just the thickness of the section because |
|
166:42 | lot of, a lot of Colonel , I've looked at the uh |
|
166:50 | One of the things that happens is becomes dramatic in the middle, about |
|
166:54 | middle of somewhere in the lower in middle of mice, if you have |
|
166:58 | nice continuous section on a continental And but anyway, you get a |
|
167:04 | of the watering going on there and you start getting cements and uh and |
|
167:09 | course you're getting that compaction rearranges the and but the courts, sandstone is |
|
167:14 | best and as you change the composition let to less and less mature, |
|
167:20 | is more mature in the sense that the physical weathering and the chemical weathering |
|
167:26 | gotten rid of almost everything except for courts. And uh and what you |
|
167:32 | up with in a nice chorzow sandstone , is nothing but this court |
|
167:40 | But one of the things that we in some other research is that the |
|
167:44 | of the court's grains can reflect the Elif from which they came. And |
|
167:51 | some, in a study we I did with some other folks at |
|
167:54 | Carolina. We are we were able show that courts coming in from the |
|
168:05 | was was a big part of the in charleston harbor in terms of their |
|
168:11 | , that was costing them millions of to, to dredge over a |
|
168:15 | And I'll show you a little bit that in the future. Whereas this |
|
168:20 | these sandstone still while they're being you can still break down into cement |
|
168:28 | different types of pathogenic plays. And , and these are even more susceptible |
|
168:35 | that because they're even less uh broken from chemical and physical weather. And |
|
168:44 | , you've seen this diagram as as we come from uh, granite |
|
168:51 | up land and work across the Piedmont down to the coastal plain. These |
|
168:56 | are breaking down in terms of feldspar from this granite and from the Metamorphic |
|
169:01 | Volcanic six, we're getting these gray to sub gray wah keys to something |
|
169:06 | would call uh court sarah Knight in case. And you end up with |
|
169:11 | the courts particles and of course this , of course there are the ash |
|
169:19 | as tough as the the lift ified of the aspect. Okay, so |
|
169:28 | terms of looking at sources this is study that we did and uh I |
|
169:34 | it's a little bit early but you look like you're getting restless and I'm |
|
169:37 | really tired and I don't want to this and injustice because I have a |
|
169:43 | of things talking about um looking at spectral gamma logs and determine the source |
|
169:54 | the sands and in this a G. Field which is a really |
|
170:00 | oil producer in the Caspian sea. uh and then later on I want |
|
170:07 | talk about some of this other stuff I was alluding to. But here |
|
170:13 | something in charleston harbor where we talk brain grain shape analysis and how it |
|
170:18 | used to help us clear up a that the Corps of Engineers had trying |
|
170:23 | figure out where the sand was coming that they kept dredging. And they |
|
170:29 | had a big water project to re the source of a lot of this |
|
170:35 | because they thought it was bringing silt it was actually bringing silty clays but |
|
170:39 | was actually bringing mostly sands and You're really looking tired. Mm |
|
170:48 | And uh I hope I don't look hope I don't look as bad as |
|
170:52 | feel but I feel horrible right now . But but anyway I I think |
|
170:59 | since this is the first weekend we'll to take a break, we've we've |
|
171:03 | a long break and it's ah four yesterday was extremely traumatic to me and |
|
171:11 | and the first four hours here today barely, I barely noticed it. |
|
171:17 | this this eight hour thing it takes guys a while to acclimate to |
|
171:20 | doesn't it? Yeah so if if don't mind, well maybe we'll stretch |
|
171:26 | lecture a few minutes longer. We've , if we look at four hour |
|
171:33 | we've got seven more four hour slots can add, had a little bit |
|
171:37 | time to each one of those and up with all this stuff. But |
|
171:43 | is kind of interesting stuff and I want to explain it to you while |
|
171:45 | tired and I don't want you to to try to listen to it when |
|
171:51 | tired. It's it's these are kind interesting in different studies and uh and |
|
171:58 | when you pointed out the issue of up in the Alleghenies were up in |
|
172:05 | part of the world, I did up in Virginia but but to me |
|
172:10 | when you work in a company and come up with a problem like that |
|
172:14 | the that can be kind of a bit of a setback. You know |
|
172:19 | people that go in and figure that , those are the best problems in |
|
172:22 | world to work on because if you help figure something like that out. |
|
172:28 | you you you are definitely making a to your company and you don't have |
|
172:33 | feel guilty that they're paying you an amount of money and those are the |
|
172:40 | of jobs I always liked and all right. I thought when Amoco |
|
172:47 | me to the Lancastrian Basin project to in charge of it, uh, |
|
172:53 | that I had never had a class lake basins, um, I thought |
|
172:58 | were trying to get rid of So I just worked really hard and |
|
173:02 | turned out to be one of the projects ever. And, and, |
|
173:07 | uh, you know, it's it's, it really makes you feel |
|
173:10 | when you do something that it was problem. People resisted working on it |
|
173:16 | it was a real problem and you the opportunity to work on it and |
|
173:20 | solve that problem. And it helps have good people to work with too |
|
173:25 | you can't do anything on your own an oil company. But, but |
|
173:30 | , I really appreciate your attention up this point. I think, I |
|
173:33 | , I don't want to stretch it longer because I am starting to feel |
|
173:40 | a lot weaker than I look. hope. I don't look this |
|
173:46 | And uh, and like I these, I think these are some |
|
173:49 | neat things to talk about and I to have my, my personal energy |
|
173:56 | to, to kind of drawing your over these topics to because I think |
|
174:03 | , they're really interesting. So I will let you go now and |
|
174:06 | hope, I hope you're getting something of this. I am trying to |
|
174:11 | through the fundamentals to get to. when we start talking about actually finding |
|
174:15 | and gas, it'll all start fitting place and uh and once we start |
|
174:21 | at oil tools and start doing things will be a little bit |
|
174:28 | And and let me ask you this , Did did everybody notice that I've |
|
174:33 | an exercise online? Yes, Okay. If you haven't noticed, |
|
174:39 | sure you take a look because it's think it's due sunday night and you |
|
174:45 | get it done now uh and turn in as you know, you don't |
|
174:50 | think of it as this is the you have your test. Think of |
|
174:54 | as I'm giving you this much time figure out what your time schedule is |
|
174:59 | get it done somewhere in there. shouldn't take too long to do if |
|
175:03 | it takes you a long time to , you're working too hard at |
|
175:06 | Okay, so have a good rest your weekend. I'm going to enjoy |
|
175:14 | uh my 45th anniversary by going to I think and uh and falling |
|
175:23 | but well I'm sure I'll do something tomorrow. So you guys have a |
|
175:29 | rest of your weekend and thank you for your attention. Thank you |
|
175:35 | Bye |
|