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00:00 | Oh good. So there, great . Stephanie was just trying to see |
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00:15 | where we left off last time. think we did the soil stuff that |
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00:19 | diagrams. I think so too, like a quick review. I didn't |
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00:38 | didn't do the musical stuff. That's kind of the fun thing if you're |
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00:48 | interested is to take these well logs put them to music. I don't |
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00:52 | do have a bit of a musical at all actually. Oh great. |
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01:07 | know, if you're ever interested in and you're multiple things to do, |
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01:10 | is something I did a long time we took these well, log sweets |
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01:14 | then we map them through a midi to a voice. And so basically |
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01:21 | can it's just a string of It's a well log and you can |
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01:24 | those through midi from 0 to 1 or the number of keys on the |
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01:28 | or whatever and then um and then them and play them together. So |
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01:33 | sounds kind of interesting but. Yeah, so let's uh go on |
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01:42 | next one. Uh I trust that turn off sometime. Okay. |
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02:12 | so there were a few things that up last time and I thought we'd |
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02:18 | , I've got three or four things came up in our last meeting. |
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02:23 | so just remembering about temperatures, the uh temperatures and pressures. Oh great |
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02:30 | , you too. Yeah that would very helpful. You know, these |
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02:34 | like they were actually bottled at high . Seriously? Yeah so back had |
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02:46 | quick reminder because in all these well there's we look at a variety as |
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02:53 | remember a variety of units and The U. S. Is one |
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02:56 | the few places. But for example doing a project of the India right |
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02:59 | it's in metric. You know we're about the Canadian oil, sands |
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03:04 | So we just want to remember that conversions, the ones I always like |
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03:09 | -40 C. You can see here how it all got started. Which |
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03:15 | all really interesting. There was no before really before Fahrenheit stuff froze and |
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03:21 | just hard to imagine that people didn't numbers on stuff but they didn't hey |
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03:24 | really cold out. Guess what? he was actually a glass blowing vase |
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03:30 | kinda guy. But he he was these glass blown tubes putting alcohol and |
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03:38 | all kinds of stuff and then gradually just adds scales on them to say |
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03:43 | is this is freezing, this is gave rise to a standard which is |
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03:48 | key. And so he originally said zero degree zero the number zero was |
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03:55 | of a saline solution, a briny originally and that he pegged at 90 |
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04:02 | going to be the number for the of the human body. Anyway that |
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04:06 | that worked out a little bit and changed it but way back then so |
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04:10 | where the scale came from the Fahrenheit and then uh that the numbers are |
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04:16 | of funky, so you know that's what we do here. But |
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04:25 | Celsius said, nah let's go from to 100 and just put which makes |
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04:31 | . And so he developed that other and then you can see the |
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04:35 | So it's good to be able to that for quick purposes. I always |
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04:42 | that minus 40 F is minus 40 . I don't know whether you've ever |
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04:47 | that cold before, but regardless of it's cold. And then of course |
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04:54 | is freezing 32 f. The other I remember is again 28 C is |
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05:00 | F and then of course 100 Is 2, 12 F. So |
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05:05 | there's a conversion. So you wanna able to do that because a lot |
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05:09 | the times around here, of course the recordings enough, but everywhere else |
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05:13 | can see. So if you're working other provinces or states, you have |
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05:19 | know once again, so that was original, the french originally put together |
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05:25 | standardization because it was mainly for length you go from one village to the |
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05:30 | and they had no standard for how your property was. So there are |
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05:34 | kinds of disagreements, you know, guy used a french foot, the |
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05:37 | guy used an Egyptian foot, who ? But it was all screwed |
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05:43 | So during the french revolution, once they said we've got to have a |
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05:47 | for length and they made it the which was something like 1 10 thousands |
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05:54 | the circumference of the earth for a . But so then they developed this |
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05:59 | . K. S. System, kilogram second and then of course they |
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06:03 | have electricity back then. So they need a unit. Uh not morphed |
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06:09 | the system, each of the I. System, which is what |
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06:16 | of the world uses and all of uses. So again it's M. |
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06:20 | . S meter kilogram second, but with current with a vampire's degrees, |
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06:29 | kelvin, it's the same size as subsystem of course it starts at absolute |
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06:35 | and then uh Greatness and the So those are the units that you're |
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06:42 | going to see in all the scientific . Another coworker who just moved here |
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06:49 | Albania in november. And she's always you americans, you don't know how |
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06:55 | measure here. And I said we she always gets like with degrees and |
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07:01 | is funny, she gets confused. and on her part she's got to |
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07:06 | a new system, sorry you're living . So but when I was in |
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07:13 | when they changed the system. So were we were imperial and like the |
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07:18 | . And then there was a decree came down that changed the whole country |
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07:22 | metric and most people hated it, didn't want to do it because all |
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07:26 | a sudden you're going to buy a of butter at the grocery store and |
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07:30 | .4 Kg. And what the hell that? So most people didn't like |
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07:35 | , but you learn to live with . Um, eventually the US probably |
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07:43 | . I mean the hospitals and they don't give you an ounce of |
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07:47 | . You know, it's going to in CCS. So it'll change. |
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07:58 | . They always tell us her. . Because they've got to keep |
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08:04 | especially with the child if it says , what the hell is 10. |
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08:11 | , you know, you got to these standards. So these are the |
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08:13 | and well logging. It's really critical the well logs are all in different |
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08:18 | . We have messed it up sometimes the well log the well might be |
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08:22 | depth, but the units are in , So you might have a well |
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08:28 | in depth and then microseconds per So it's good to just be alert |
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08:35 | that. You were talking about H S. So I went back and |
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08:39 | at this a little bit as you know, hydrogen sulfide, your sour |
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08:48 | and sour. Actually has a definition the oil field And it's uh, |
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08:55 | than .5% by weight. Um, that's actually the sulfur content. So |
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09:06 | should be S. 02. It be sulfur dioxide. It could be |
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09:10 | Could be uh, something hydro hydro acid. There's lots of things that |
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09:16 | be. But as you were the 500 parts per million is probably |
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09:25 | to be fatal and much above it's almost instantaneous. This is a |
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09:30 | , really toxic gas. So now can also see various various kinds of |
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09:46 | sort of sour crude is, in sense. Doubly bad because it's typically |
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09:51 | , it's typically got very very long chains. And so it's dense and |
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09:57 | also somewhat toxic. So when you up to the west texas intermediate, |
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10:04 | the stuff that's coming out of the basin right now is very light around |
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10:10 | degrees A. P. I. it's very sweet point 25 or something |
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10:19 | percent. So it's W. I. West texas intermediate crude is |
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10:25 | , really a good good oil. you can see some of that |
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10:33 | Now, interestingly, I was one my students, I met with her |
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10:36 | morning, she's working for one of companies in west texas and they're drilling |
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10:42 | kinds of holes in west texas and two of us is a really big |
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10:46 | for them. And so finally she brought it up, it's gonna |
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10:50 | that it's gonna be a chapter. said, I want to I want |
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10:52 | look at this, She's leading a for the company on H. two |
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10:58 | . Kind of from the production of things because when it gets into the |
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11:03 | and pipelines it corrodes and so it erodes and corrodes and eats, eats |
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11:09 | steel. So she said that H S was a big problem for |
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11:14 | And she wants to find a way explore for it like gas. So |
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11:22 | I said, well, you never , It might be that we can |
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11:27 | seismic, we can do an do A. B. O. |
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11:31 | can certainly see gas and maybe there be a certain association, we probably |
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11:39 | see H two S directly, but can probably see that there's high gas |
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11:43 | here. And if we know that in this rock at this depth corresponds |
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11:49 | H two S, then we can proxies. So, you know |
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11:52 | this is the H two S prone . And so that is very, |
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11:57 | practical, they might want to completely it. So, you know |
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12:01 | we don't want to deal with that of hydrogen sulfide. So that was |
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12:06 | the thing that came out this morning will probably start looking for. How |
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12:11 | we somehow predict what might be high to us in the shales. So |
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12:20 | kind of interesting. Uh we had a little bit about other other materials |
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12:27 | the in the reservoir fluids. And once again here, you can see |
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12:33 | typically in the reservoir, the water brine and it's very saline Uh |
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12:48 | as you can see is maybe a percent salt. Use about 3.5% |
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12:58 | And of course we can't drink seawater that puts ions in us and our |
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13:06 | have a certain amount of fresh And so drinking salt water, your |
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13:12 | tries to equip vibrate and get the concentration down that dehydrates your cells and |
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13:19 | cells don't like that. And then course your nervous system is firing on |
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13:24 | that are very delicate balance to conduct back and forth. And if you |
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13:29 | that up with other ions, that's bad for your body. So we |
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13:35 | drink seawater. Fresh water, as can see is less than .05 or |
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13:48 | parts per 1000. And of in in seawater, that's mainly sodium |
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13:55 | , rock, dissolved rock salt. , I was curious uh about the |
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14:06 | kind of, the relationship. Salt to brine as sugar is to |
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14:14 | And you can see that extreme brine about as salty as ice wine is |
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14:24 | . So just as an idea how brine is and how sweet ice wine |
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14:31 | . So here we go with different , you can see that very dry |
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14:35 | zero measured grams per 100 millimeters. you can see that this is, |
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14:42 | is actually 500, believe it or , Does't look like 500, That's |
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14:53 | 500 miles. Um so a dry . Somewhere around here would be one |
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15:03 | per 100 mils. So there would five g of salt. These five |
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15:08 | of sugar in that that's kind of . Yeah. So when you get |
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15:15 | to wines that probably more people like a 2345. Um and that corresponds |
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15:24 | something like five g of sugar per mils. So this guy would have |
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15:30 | g of sugar in it. That's sweeter. Then when you get the |
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15:34 | wine there are 25 g per 100 . So this would have a 2525 |
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15:41 | cubes to salt in it. And really good. But you just how |
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15:52 | sure you're eating is unbelievable. So a bit of an idea from something |
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15:56 | we can taste too. Also saltiness various fluids. Sea water is seawater |
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16:06 | something like a medium sweet wine. salt, it's a medium salty fluid |
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16:15 | to a medium sweet wine. But the time we're getting to brian in |
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16:18 | formation it's extremely salty. And it's even more salty than ice wine is |
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16:28 | . Then we talked a little bit just about where about us production, |
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16:31 | are just kind of cleaning up from we talked about last time. And |
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16:43 | can see that the U. Is the biggest oil producer in the |
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16:46 | right now which is great Pushing 12 barrels of oil per day. And |
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16:56 | what what's the price of oil today . Yeah. Beautiful. I'm glad |
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17:13 | hear that. No. Well it so much of what's happening around here |
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17:23 | around the world. So I've just the I just have the apple stock |
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17:32 | and you can it's did you see ? What who's what's the name of |
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17:50 | what are we looking for? Um just I've got it on the stock |
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17:56 | so the apples there's a list. not sure what. Yeah. Well |
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18:06 | actually should be crude oil and and annotation is C. L. Equals |
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18:10 | . For some reason 1 29. you add stocks on that where you |
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18:26 | ? Yeah. Um I see new see maybe just see. Yeah |
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19:43 | Yeah. So there you go. you can do the quick multiplication, |
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19:54 | a barrel and 12 million barrels a . How much money is that bringing |
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20:01 | per day for the US? Yeah so a billion a day and |
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20:16 | you can kind of double that with gas but so you've got that's why |
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20:22 | just fabulously important for the U. . Economy. And not to mention |
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20:28 | texas, it's not to mention in because texas produces about half that. |
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20:36 | the numbers for we'll get to that west texas But just so you've got |
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20:41 | in your back pocket that that the produces about 12 million barrels per |
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20:48 | The next two biggest producers. Saudi somewhere around 10 or 11. And |
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20:54 | Russia is around the same around 10 11 million barrels per day. So |
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21:01 | are the big the three biggest producers far and then there are fairly big |
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21:08 | . Canada Iraq Nigeria china are all , moderate producers. But you can |
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21:24 | see that this is mainly Permian west and it's it's light and this is |
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21:35 | , great oil. I just added here the what's happening right now. |
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21:43 | um you know the biggest the biggest in U. S. History was |
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21:50 | a couple of years ago. Then course with Covid it all fell down |
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21:53 | now it's been increasing. So here got that peak and now we're increasing |
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21:58 | . So the fact of the matter in the U. S. Production |
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22:01 | increasing. People are going for There were of course in this period |
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22:10 | very many jobs, this is starting get a little bit better than we |
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22:15 | the crash that there weren't many But now with the price of oil |
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22:20 | there's just so much money in oil , so things are changing. Uh |
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22:28 | gas down here, you can see effect of geography. So US natural |
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22:33 | is lots of natural gas in the , some of it's coming out of |
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22:38 | marcellus shale, some of that of Permian lots of places, gas doesn't |
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22:47 | trade with an international price because you ship it very easily. So there's |
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22:52 | lot of gas in the U. . Good for the U. |
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22:55 | Industry. And so it's cheap, a lot of it. And you |
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23:00 | get it out very easily. But big industry now is lng liquified natural |
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23:09 | . So if you cool and pressurize natural gas, you can ship it |
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23:17 | . And there's some of the biggest in the world right here. Saving |
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23:21 | with senior saving past huge facility just of Beaumont. So, not far |
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23:27 | here. And, but to move gas, you have to get it |
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23:41 | a part. You have to compress , cool it, clean it, |
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23:44 | all that stuff, then you gotta ships built, it'll take pressurized natural |
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23:48 | and you've got to ship it and you got to get it someplace they |
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23:51 | to have the decompression facilities. So bottom line is that it's expanding the |
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23:57 | . S. Changed its, its laws to allow hydrocarbon exports a |
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24:03 | years ago, which was great. opposed by some of the chemical manufacturers |
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24:09 | , why would the petrochemical guys oppose exports? Mm hmm. Because 20 |
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24:32 | , It just means that people are to compete and pay more for |
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24:35 | They say, I don't, I want anybody. I want, if |
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24:40 | trying to produce, make something here needs natural gas coming in. I |
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24:44 | cheap gas. If I've got cops somebody else is willing to pay for |
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24:48 | , then I have to pay more it. It's pretty simple. So |
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24:51 | can see what happened, uh, course, during, during conflicts or |
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25:01 | when the, when the price of goes down or or porch shot or |
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25:05 | else like that. It's not a deal for here as much. But |
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25:11 | you're in Korea or europe then they have their own natural gas they desperately |
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25:15 | . And so you can see that price would go up to 35 bucks |
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25:18 | M. C. F. When typically trading for three bucks here. |
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25:23 | Korea and Japan and Rotterdam and Germany stuck paying a lot. So once |
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25:36 | , This is the Permian basin. can see that the premium base is |
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25:39 | about 5.5 million barrels of oil a . Just massive amounts. So |
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25:43 | $400 million dollars a day coming out the Permian. And then normally we |
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25:53 | of the Permian being in two there's the Delaware basin separated by high |
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26:01 | then the midland basin, all that the Permian basin. And you can |
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26:07 | that we've talked a little bit about . T. I. West texas |
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26:11 | versus Brent Brent is from the North . It's also a good oil. |
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26:17 | not quite as beautiful as W. . I. It's a little bit |
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26:24 | and it's got a little bit more . The good news, why Brent |
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26:32 | trades for more then W. I. Is that energy is expensive |
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26:38 | over in europe. Plus people like because it's easily accessible. It's on |
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26:47 | ocean already, you don't have to it. So they're willing to pay |
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26:52 | for it because it's, it's more and it's ready, it's being produced |
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26:59 | offshore platforms already, so bring a up, have an FPs so floating |
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27:06 | production and storage and offloading ship that refines it right there, puts it |
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27:12 | another, take it anywhere in the europe is good at that. Then |
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27:25 | talked a little bit about just where lot of the west texas crude |
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27:30 | it goes to cushing Oklahoma because they huge storage there and a distribution network |
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27:37 | this is actually where oil is So if I buy oil on the |
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27:45 | market or something, it's for delivery cushing and so the way the market |
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27:52 | is that there are all kinds of that go to cushing Oklahoma, the |
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27:57 | go there and effectively by the oil there and then they ship it to |
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28:00 | they need to. But the price quoted is west texas crude at cushing |
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28:16 | of course their traders all over the who are, who are trading but |
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28:19 | is actually physical delivery of the oil and that's why that time a couple |
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28:23 | ago when oil went to negative Yeah, that was at that |
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28:29 | it was just bizarre. I have I didn't even know what it |
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28:36 | I remember because we had a group on and I was like dr Stewart's |
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28:40 | freak out today. Say it was was bizarre, bizarre. Okay so |
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28:55 | the other, another example that just remember about fluids, you can see |
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29:01 | brand on this graph is just more . W. T. I. |
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29:05 | a little bit less Western. Canadian comes from the largely from the oil |
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29:10 | up here. The biggest deposit of on earth is about a trillion |
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29:14 | Actually there uh over the area of like probably the size of massachusetts, |
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29:27 | huge but it's it's uh as you see it's high viscosity, its heavy |
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29:31 | and so it um you have to it or dilute it, its hydrocarbon |
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29:38 | it's heavy hydrocarbon. So This produces three million barrels a day. It's |
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29:42 | very productive but it's a bit more . Yeah I've probably gone over this |
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29:50 | class but I don't remember um what like Canada versus like Saudi like geologically |
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29:59 | why is the oil like like it's oil that Canadian was just like so |
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30:06 | and it was like what about geological makes it so different. Yeah the |
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30:17 | about Saudi, it's a number one the source rock so they had a |
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30:21 | marine shale so that's number one, wasn't a carriage iness, sorry. |
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30:29 | um and then it was buried and it was appropriately cooked and then it |
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30:47 | it didn't migrate it was kept so was kept in the oven kept kept |
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30:56 | deep and then not degraded So in Venezuela as well as Canada. This |
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31:15 | two ideas probably was pretty good. then it basically spilled, it's |
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31:24 | It's only at some of it's right the surface. So in fact it's |
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31:31 | , it's not even for a lot it is actually just scooped up. |
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31:37 | should I should have brought that Um I've got some in my |
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31:41 | just oil sand. It's just like to Galveston's on and dumping on the |
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31:48 | or bitumen on the beach. It nature's spilt. And so a lot |
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31:54 | this soil migrated. Some people think it may have migrated hundreds of miles |
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31:58 | being good oil and then it migrated the surface and then it gets |
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32:11 | So that's one thing that can And in Canada, this is, |
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32:18 | is all shallow. If, if been a cap rock, like Saudi |
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32:21 | has a big cap rock and it's kept kept the cooker on |
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32:24 | cooked it to uh to certain temperatures then it kept it there and there |
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32:30 | no degradation of the oil and, that had been cooked perfectly. So |
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32:42 | is shallow again. So it gets when it gets shallow and it may |
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32:47 | not have been cooked enough. You , there's a couple things happen. |
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32:54 | like if you were saying baking muffins something and you've got the dough and |
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33:02 | it bake it until it was all and fluffy and a nice card muffin |
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33:07 | something. But if you didn't bake enough, it would still be a |
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33:10 | bit gooey. So that's one Or if you took that muffin and |
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33:16 | left it outside for a couple of , it's probably gonna be hard. |
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33:23 | there are a couple of things that happen. Both them probably happened |
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33:27 | So the oil is degraded. It's bad. It's like I told |
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33:30 | the guy who was one of my in grad school, john Hunt, |
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33:35 | wrote the textbook of petroleum geochemistry and were in his class like you were |
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33:40 | he went to Venezuela and Venezuela is same thing, huge shoots similar of |
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33:44 | deposit like this. But it The service degraded became heavy. And |
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33:48 | just wrote us a postcard and he on the postcard and you can almost |
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33:53 | his tears old for a cap In other words, if that stuff |
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33:58 | made it to the surface and have cooked a bit more and stored, |
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34:02 | would have had by far the biggest in the world. Likewise here, |
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34:08 | this stuff had met a cap rock the Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia had a |
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34:15 | rock, it didn't spew to the and it kept very nice crude. |
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34:22 | , so we've been through Gavin Rae . Um I think one thing that |
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34:27 | might not have discussed last time was when we start to move a little |
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34:32 | more toward quantitative analysis. Um the just wanted to mention that we established |
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34:43 | the sand line or the minimum gamma and we'll look at this in one |
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34:50 | your cases and then typically you established maximum value of the gap Marie and |
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34:58 | the spread. Then you just take the log, whatever it is. |
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35:03 | got our log coming down like The fraction of basically the fraction of |
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35:09 | the logs reading between minimum and That's just our fraction. So |
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35:15 | we've got a minimum here. Sad , shale line, the logs like |
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35:19 | and then that's just percentage saM going . So that becomes our gamma ray |
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35:28 | . And basically you kind of call a volume of shale or be |
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35:35 | So we talked about the gallery last , but this is the calculation. |
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35:41 | once again, uh our basic gamma gives us everything that's radioactive, but |
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35:54 | can be a bit more selective. a more sophisticated log is called the |
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35:59 | gamma ray log. And it has filter because potassium has energy of gamma |
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36:06 | , uranium has slightly different energy of rays and the thorium has slightly |
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36:10 | So we can filter for those and make three tracks. And that would |
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36:14 | if we were lucky if we really to know the details here. |
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36:20 | normally in conventional reservoirs, we don't care because I just hate shales. |
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36:27 | so in the conventional reservoir, we want shells in an unconventional reservoir, |
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36:32 | love shells because we're gonna break them get there. But in the in |
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36:47 | organics, the organics might be more by the uranium track than, |
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36:53 | the thorium track. So if we're to tease out exactly what's attached to |
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37:00 | oil and not the matrix the I might want to know, especially |
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37:04 | the shale, just exactly what's in shale. And so I want more |
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37:09 | just total radio activity. I want know where is the radio activity coming |
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37:12 | And that's going to be a total content indicator. A toc indicator, |
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37:19 | it might be that its potassium might more attacks strictly to the matrix uranium |
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37:26 | be more of an organic indicator. we might want to separate them. |
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37:30 | just a bit more sophisticated. So again at our field camp, when |
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37:37 | looked at this as an example, might call this the sand, that's |
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37:41 | minimum on the gamma ray, So we might call this the sand |
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37:49 | and then the maximum I may be that the shale. So if we |
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38:00 | to do that, the sand of case, what's the value there, |
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38:04 | , can you see here's the scale . This is gonna be the |
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38:25 | 25. Yeah, so this is . That's 100. The divisions are |
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38:31 | each. So 0, 2040. in there you would yeah, let's |
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38:42 | it 25 or 30. Okay, we're gonna pay that, this is |
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38:49 | minimum. So we're going to call our sand. And then if I |
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38:53 | at the maximum excursion here, it's okay, say 100. So that's |
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39:07 | excursion from 30 to say 100. , I'm gonna say that's pure |
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39:13 | that's pure shale. And then whatever numbers are, I'm going to subtract |
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39:22 | minimum and do the ratio and that's to give me a fraction of sand |
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39:29 | 1 - that is the fraction assuming that this is a classic sand |
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39:36 | system, which around here is so let's do a quick calculation. Say |
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39:47 | took the depth right here. What's value? 40 right there. Time |
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40:15 | using the numbers up here and So I said right, where was |
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40:25 | ? I was right there. I on my iPad 60. Okay, |
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40:39 | . Yeah, it's okay, that's . Let's compute the percentage. |
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40:53 | So, we're gonna take basically 60 the minimum, which we said was |
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40:59 | friends, 30. And then the was a 100 -30. So that's |
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41:06 | 70 seven. So 2 points. .42. Yeah, so 3/7, |
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41:35 | will be about .42. Okay. , is that what is that? |
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41:40 | that the sand or the shale? that's right, so that's 42% shale |
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41:48 | how much sand? Yeah. So gonna say that's 58 at that particular |
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42:01 | , We're looking at 58% sand six that's that's the most simple lethality log |
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42:14 | got. And when we look at how they've done it, that's more |
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42:19 | less how they they've done their mythology , they're just gonna say, |
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42:26 | assume it's sand shell, guess what got uh 58% sand there. I |
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42:34 | when it's a blog and like some of log equation, not just thinking |
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42:43 | yeah so it it is the depth but but this, oh where was |
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42:54 | ? This is just the value out given these are all given depths but |
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43:00 | gonna take the gr log is the ray log and that's just the log |
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43:05 | a function of depth. So this the gamma ray value at that |
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43:09 | So these other values these guy and guy we take we look at the |
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43:16 | log and what's the minimum of the log or this whole this whole |
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43:21 | what's the maximum over the whole And now we're looking at my log |
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43:26 | going like this for every every depth that log, what does that mean |
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43:31 | terms of with ology? So this just a real way to convert that |
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43:40 | into something kind of quantitative and with logically meaning if let's let's look at |
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43:54 | of your Yeah, she would so if you can it was |
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44:51 | So here This is 75 sorry. simple Teresa. Okay, camera |
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45:27 | And then you can look at your that 75. So that should be |
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45:46 | say so Your gamma ray is excursion from 50 to 90. That's the |
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45:58 | . We're gonna say rage. Now have an exercise right now. Oh |
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46:09 | , engineer here. So do Yeah. Okay, great, |
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46:25 | Good. So that's that's just a on the gamma ray, what is |
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46:34 | us and then how to make it bit more quantitative. And again the |
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46:39 | in the in the log analysis package do basically exactly that, take a |
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46:45 | of maximum, then look everywhere in , it's sand and shale and then |
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46:49 | out nice pretty colors and charging. . We we had we talked a |
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47:00 | bit more about the but the acoustic too. And and mentioned that this |
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47:11 | just uh in the simplest form the time of sound waves or sonic value |
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47:18 | a given interval. So here it be just how fast it takes sound |
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47:23 | travel across a foot. And then is your measurement, it's the microsecond |
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47:30 | the transit time across the foot. here's the basic idea that we have |
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47:41 | little chirp for that's just a little unit, it sends out a little |
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47:45 | , you can actually hear it and that goes through the fluid hits the |
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47:50 | wall and vibrates the borehole wall sends wave and then we recorded a receiver |
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47:58 | . So the simplest thing is just go from the source to the |
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48:02 | And if they were separated by about foot that gives you a microsecond transit |
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48:07 | per foot that be your output. it turns out that's okay but if |
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48:12 | tool is tilted or the formation of or the logos or rough or something |
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48:18 | it doesn't work as well. So course being a geophysicist we want more |
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48:24 | . So the way to correct this to have an upper transmitter that transmits |
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48:29 | we receive it a lower transmitter, receive it and we basically just subtract |
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48:34 | guys and so we get an interval this interior one ft. And it |
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48:40 | depend as much on the fluid and borehole wall and the tilt and all |
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48:45 | errors. So this is a called B. H. C. Or |
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48:52 | whole corrected sonic log. And it one of the first ways to get |
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48:57 | little bit better reading because now instead just trying to pick this first arrival |
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49:12 | can actually correlate the arrival here in rival here and look for the move |
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49:18 | . So when you think of processing , if I gotta pick this first |
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49:22 | , I have to do it So I need to know what's the |
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49:24 | that I have to have a pulse . And then there are all kinds |
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49:28 | bad things that can happen. But I've got two measurements, I can |
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49:31 | cross correlate these guys and look for leg so I can bring a lot |
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49:36 | data into it in the cross It's a bit more tolerant of errors |
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49:41 | noise. And I can just look the leg here and that gives me |
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49:46 | microseconds per foot between those two So it's a more robust noise, |
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49:55 | measurement. And we do that. find that a lot of rocks have |
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50:02 | characteristic times. And so you can some of the times here. It's |
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50:09 | to take 55 microseconds to go across foot of sandstone. Uh dolla mates |
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50:16 | faster or slower. They would yeah, it's taking less time to |
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50:27 | across them and salts are slower. , so that's that's one thing. |
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50:40 | Now that was kind of a compression wave, but but we can also |
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50:46 | shear wave that propagates along the whole to to get a shear wave |
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50:51 | And that's done by having a di or a piston source here that pushes |
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50:59 | fluid. And then that causes sort ground roll to go along. Or |
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51:03 | surface wave to go along the border which is attached to the shear wave |
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51:07 | . So we can get a shear velocity that way. And oops, |
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51:13 | slides kind of messed up the uh , here's just a little bit more |
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51:17 | the mechanics of, of an actual . This is a little bit more |
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51:29 | but basically we like to measure both compression wave velocity and the shear wave |
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51:34 | . And we do that. We start to separate the rock type. |
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51:42 | once again we just make a raw . Wave measurement, a shear wave |
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51:47 | for a given place and the ratio the cross plot of those guys starts |
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51:53 | separate and we can determine what kind rock it is and sometimes what kind |
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51:56 | ferocity from just these two measurements then an actual tool, what it looks |
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52:12 | . We have a source here and receivers receivers and a source and so |
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52:20 | just gonna put this in the well then measure the time through the formation |
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52:23 | here to hear that blast. This measure the time two here and two |
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52:32 | and then really average all those and the time across this area in the |
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52:38 | and that's R. D. Or our time of transmission across that |
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52:45 | interval. And then this is moving measurements done really fast as the tool |
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52:52 | up the whole and it's only taking few some dozens of microseconds to travel |
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53:00 | that because sound travels really fast then the tool that maybe a meter per |
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53:07 | . But the sound is propagating at m per second. So you can |
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53:12 | this measurement while logging so once again a couple more when we're in all |
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53:26 | logging instruments, we have to worry how big they are. Really embarrassing |
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53:32 | you've got a a smaller well and two of us too big, it |
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53:36 | fit. So we worry about that little bit because when we're drilling water |
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53:42 | or something, they're, they're not big and the instrument has to be |
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53:46 | to fit inside. So simple things in the oil field, if you've |
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53:51 | a particularly hot well, then you to make sure that the tool will |
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53:58 | that. Or if it's a deep , can it go that deep? |
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54:01 | those are all things that we would to consider in a well logging |
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54:08 | And for us, if we've got array sonic or multiple receivers, you |
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54:11 | see that across the array of the , the sound wave goes through the |
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54:16 | propagates back in the borehole and we look at the, the move out |
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54:22 | or the slope and you can see we can extract that slope by just |
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54:28 | a cross correlation between all these guys that's how we automatically determine the |
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54:53 | So the result of that is I've this tool and I'm logging and I |
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54:59 | the slope one over the slope is velocity. So the slowness, whatever |
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55:05 | slowness is, the transit time for or that's just one over the |
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55:11 | And so normally the well logs are plotted in Sonus or transit time because |
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55:16 | how they're measured. But as geophysicist usually think of velocities. So we |
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55:25 | take one over. Just take the and then ultimately we see classic figures |
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55:31 | this. So the log is in and velocity and we've got a p |
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55:37 | value and share way value. And can see that for this area. |
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55:45 | was kind of Shelly up here and this is sandy and then this is |
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55:52 | . The P wave doesn't see too difference between the sand and the |
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55:58 | But the shear wave sees a big between the sand in the shell because |
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56:07 | sand is very rigid and the shale very malleable. So the sand shows |
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56:16 | as a high shear wave velocity which a high rigidity. The shell shows |
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56:30 | as a relatively low shear wave velocity it's not very rigid. The P |
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56:36 | is telling us more about compressibility and both kind of equally compressible. So |
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56:41 | doesn't seem much different. Okay. you can see that this is |
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56:57 | you know what O. W. . Stands for the oil water |
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57:04 | So once again the oil is floating top of the water because it's .85 |
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57:13 | per cc. And the water is 1.1 g per cc. And then |
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57:19 | can see that this is all interpreted as sand but there's a bit of |
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57:28 | kick here and that's probably because there's some dia genesis. This is |
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57:39 | it's probably been briny first 50 million . And so there's a slightly different |
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57:45 | type that's been generated because of dia because going from oil to water, |
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58:08 | is slightly more dense. So in the the shear wave velocity would normally |
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58:16 | a little bit, but it's not increasing and the people have increased a |
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58:22 | . So you'd have to guess that some rock type change, not just |
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58:30 | fluid. And then there were a of different values. And you start |
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58:39 | get to know these guys sandstone has high shear wave velocity, so a |
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58:44 | ratio. And then as we get some of these other units, they |
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58:49 | variable amounts. Okay, we're going get this guy and had a look |
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59:01 | that before. But this is just once again make sure that we can |
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59:04 | all this stuff and and work through . And so let's take a little |
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59:08 | those stuff. Not we start cross . Thank you. So we can |
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59:23 | those two numbers. And at any or we start plotting V. S |
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59:30 | Vp. And you can see when when we do that, the |
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59:35 | numbers start to separate into clusters at different depths. And you can see |
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59:42 | the say the limestone is fast Vp fast V. S. Is fast |
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59:53 | that's an indicator that this this is limestone. You can see way down |
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59:59 | , the shells are slower. All . And so when we've got these |
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60:09 | pure units, they separate. So I have an area that on the |
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60:18 | and the VP is 5000 and the . S. Is 3000. Can |
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60:22 | tell me what kind of rock it ? V. P. 5000. |
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60:27 | . S. Is. 3000? Well 3000 slower. Oh wait he's |
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60:40 | VPN um V. P. 5000 V. S. 3000. |
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60:54 | kind of rock is it? You don't have to overthink this. |
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61:05 | read the graph. Yes. VPs V. S. Is 3000. |
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61:21 | . Yes. Yeah but you don't have to do that. 3000 |
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|
61:33 | Guess what it's it's right there. . So. No it's just getting |
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61:39 | but so the point here is that just made two measurements and for this |
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61:48 | area, those two measurements tell me kind of rock it is. So |
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62:01 | the really key concept here is that making just a property measurement, just |
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62:10 | transit time of wave through it. can actually tell you what kind of |
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62:15 | it is for these simple cases this real data but for for simple geology |
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|
62:20 | I could tell you likewise if if said oh I looked at this area |
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62:26 | is 4000 V. S. Is that is that a dolomite? |
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62:32 | I don't have dollar mine. So don't know is a limestone. So |
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62:37 | . P. S. 4000 S. Is 2000. What is |
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62:44 | ? Sure? Yeah. V. . Over V. S. Is |
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62:50 | around too. So you're thinking could just from V. P. Over |
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62:55 | . S. It could be this this. That's the that's the two |
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62:59 | . But the velocities are really So it has to be down |
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63:02 | So guess what? That's a shell that's the that's the kind of Fernie |
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|
63:15 | . So likewise we can make a of density. This is a bit |
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63:20 | complicated. I can make a measurement density with a log And we'll talk |
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63:24 | that smart. And then I can that V. P. V. |
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63:27 | . Value and just do the very thing have all my logs. And |
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63:32 | for every depth, pick the pick the V. S. Pick |
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63:36 | density and then cross plot those. that's what people do A lot log |
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63:41 | and industry people do a lot of cross plots. When I cross plot |
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63:47 | get all this garbage and I think I don't understand that. But if |
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63:51 | had a third log the gamma ray and I plot that in color |
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63:57 | Then all of a sudden I start see something coherent. So how we |
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64:04 | this is as the material at any . Get shay earlier and shay earlier |
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64:10 | can see that I start to get here. So B. P. |
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64:15 | B. S. Gets bigger. gets higher. But if I picked |
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64:22 | I had density of 2.25 And the . p. v. s ratio |
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64:27 | 2.7. I'd be out here. radioactive is that rock likely be |
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64:41 | So say from seismic measurements I could density and velocity. I can't get |
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64:49 | activity from the surface. It's too away. But if I've got density |
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64:55 | VPs they cross plot and that's pretty . So if you've got a fairly |
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65:00 | density rock and a high B. . P. S ratio, I |
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|
65:04 | almost guarantee you it's radioactive. So concept here is that I can make |
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65:12 | measurements or three and by correlation and lots of Work, I can actually |
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65:23 | a 4th one in this case radio . Which is very valuable because I'll |
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65:28 | these measurements. I don't know what is. It's just got the |
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65:31 | It's got this philosophy. Well, what? It's a shame. So |
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65:41 | we look on further we can often the P wave velocity. The shear |
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65:47 | velocity of seismic. I can often something of density out of seismic. |
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65:52 | I can get that, then I actually infer how radioactive the rockets. |
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|
65:59 | so that's important. I get to things and I in for a very |
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66:06 | thing. So that's that's really the . And that's the idea with seismic |
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|
66:12 | . I make these measurements. The . I get seismic. I do |
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66:15 | the processing inversion. I come up these beautiful seismic inversions for density. |
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66:20 | . P. V. S. , nobody cares about VPN Bs. |
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|
66:24 | do care about whether it's shale or . And so that's the first, |
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|
66:29 | I take my picture, that's PVS density. I convert it into |
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66:34 | shell in this image. So that's we're going with why we do a |
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66:38 | of this stuff. Okay, so do another little exercise. Um now |
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|
66:59 | this case we we've talked about this of making the measurement of the transit |
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67:09 | through a material. This could be core plug, it could be a |
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|
67:13 | or anything. And because we're we're simple people. We imagine that |
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67:21 | rock is really this simple. It's matrix and ferocity that's full of |
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67:30 | of a water or water or a or a gas. So when we |
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67:38 | a vibration out here and it goes , we imagine that that travel time |
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|
67:42 | just going through the matrix and the . I mean obviously this is |
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|
67:46 | really simple, but we're going to if it works, it works. |
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|
67:49 | here's and if that's our concept, is our concept, it's going through |
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67:56 | matrix, then going through the Then you can see that the travel |
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68:01 | through the rock is the travel time the matrix. Travel time through the |
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|
68:12 | . So I just replaced travel time the rock with the distance, the |
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68:17 | of the rock and the travel time the matrix is just one minus the |
|
|
68:24 | . That's that length. Then through process it's just the percentage of the |
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|
68:28 | length. Then if I just saw simple equation, I get the porosity |
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|
68:36 | the transit time or the slowness. this is exactly like the equation for |
|
|
68:47 | percentage shale. So we've made this log measurement, but now I could |
|
|
69:17 | a porosity which is getting closer to I want. So we're gonna use |
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|
69:22 | sonic log for two things. The thing is just like those cross plots |
|
|
69:26 | determine mythology. The second thing is extract an estimate of ferocity. So |
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|
69:33 | what we're gonna use the sonic log . So let's do it. So |
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|
69:41 | another little calculation for you. So we looked at the nordic, let's |
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|
69:54 | the calculation for the nordic. The transit time or slowness. The P |
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|
70:03 | was 200. Okay, So measured of the P wave is 200. |
|
|
70:24 | was the unit? Yeah. Then going to assume that it was a |
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70:37 | because that's more or less what all numbers gave us. So now we |
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|
70:42 | to we're going to assume we have make an assumption. We're going to |
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70:46 | that it's a sandstone. So now need to know the matrix slowness of |
|
|
70:51 | and we had that 1.6. but we also know that it was |
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|
71:16 | cemented. Right? So, among , why don't we just say 50 |
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71:23 | per foot? So immediately we run a unit's problem but I would just |
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71:31 | it all down because we're gonna fix . So the Sandstone Matrix is say |
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|
71:38 | microseconds per foot. Then we've got find the slowness of brain. And |
|
|
71:56 | we we looked that up and the of Brian, they tell us is |
|
|
72:00 | 190 microseconds per foot. Well 190 per foot. That actually that's the |
|
|
72:11 | sort of the mud velocity because we're that it's invaded the formation. |
|
|
72:20 | so now you've got the fluid slowness now you just need to plug. |
|
|
72:30 | know the matrix. We said the was 50 microseconds per but the fluid |
|
|
72:39 | 1 90. Yeah, the matrix a game 50. But you're going |
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72:52 | have to convert this? Two microseconds foot 7, 3. That one |
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73:11 | can look up. I'll take So, you know more or |
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73:19 | And it's good to have a basic to me, it's like using google |
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73:23 | when driving. I want to know or less where I'm going because every |
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73:27 | in a while, the google map is wrong, 3.28. Right? |
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73:35 | and so A meter, as you imagine it is about three ft a |
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73:40 | more than three ft. So if my slowness is 200 microseconds per meter |
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73:57 | takes it takes 200 microseconds to go ft. So how many, how |
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74:02 | microseconds to go? one ft? . Okay, so this is why |
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74:25 | want to do it by hand. so there's nothing wrong with this. |
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74:29 | want to work through my hands. it's taking 200 microseconds to go 3.28 |
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74:35 | . So Tony Go, one it's gonna take about a third of |
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74:39 | . So it's 200 divided by which gave you Yeah. So what's |
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74:47 | porosity? Right, so that is to be and that you can use |
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75:06 | your calculator. So to the of rock, which is going to be |
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75:26 | . The matrix. Yeah, So what's what's that in percentage. |
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76:34 | , so now you think about does, is that about what you |
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76:39 | expect? Is that in the game talked about a maximum porosity rock, |
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76:50 | ? Which was extreme ferocity might Was it 150? Did you just |
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77:02 | this is ferocity extreme, extremely porous ? I don't Well, extremely |
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77:16 | might be up to say almost half rock is airing. So be something |
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77:21 | 45% is extremely porous. We typically see that. So what a porous |
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77:28 | might be something like 25%. That'd very good ferocity. A porous carbonate |
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77:33 | be 10%. So this looks like pretty somewhat low porosity sandstone, but |
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77:42 | in the game. So you calculate . Well, that's in the |
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77:48 | I believe it. It makes sense the rock is very high velocity and |
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77:55 | a sandstone. So we know it's very high velocity sandstone and we know |
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77:58 | got carbonate cement. So how much is left? Well, Not that |
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78:06 | . And so 9% says, there's not that much. So that |
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78:10 | calculation because in the ballpark, so kind of believe it, but it's |
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78:18 | through the calculation yourself tells you, first of all, this is the |
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78:23 | the computer is going to do So if you're gonna write some |
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78:27 | you would do exactly that. good. Okay. Um so that's |
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78:37 | how from this raw measurement, the sonic measurement, we're going to |
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78:43 | I would put a sonic track a track. So that's how it's |
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78:53 | Okay, let's move on to catch on the density log. And this |
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79:05 | another big important detail. We've got know the density of the rock and |
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79:10 | want to know the density of the as again, the mythology indicator we |
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79:16 | process is the same way to get out of it. So I'm gonna |
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79:19 | ferocity out of this. Then when make synthetic size programs, we know |
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79:26 | seismic waves are sensitive to the density the rock, especially the density |
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79:37 | So this is another very standard log you can see the way it |
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79:49 | it goes into the formation again and a radioactive source. Now, the |
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79:56 | ray tools remember it was just a detector, it was sodium iodide crystals |
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80:02 | something. It's just measuring the natural activity coming into it. This is |
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80:06 | active source. So this is generating own radio activity and shooting gamma rays |
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80:11 | the formation. And what it does it's going to look for the attenuation |
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80:16 | gamma rays and that's going to tell what the bulk density of the |
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80:24 | Okay, good physics here. And going to look at the basically attenuation |
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80:30 | gamma rays between the short detector and long detector. And this presses against |
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80:38 | borehole wall because we want to get radio activity right into the formation and |
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80:44 | have it go through the fluid because fluid attenuated. And I want to |
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80:48 | a measurement just of the rock. once again, we've got a source |
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80:57 | irradiating the formation and we're receiving here receiving energy here. And we're gonna |
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81:03 | at what's the decrease in gamma radiation here. And from that, we |
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81:11 | determine something about the bulk density of rock. So we kind of get |
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81:27 | the physics of we shoot gamma rays And depending on the electronic structure will |
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81:35 | us um the amount of attenuation or for our purposes. The photon goes |
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81:45 | , it gets scattered or absorbed and we measure how much the absorption is |
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81:54 | there's physics stretch in the physics, for us practical purposes, we've got |
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82:00 | radioactive source here, it gets the photons it emits gets scattered absorbed |
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82:05 | we measure them and look at the . And uh in the in the |
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82:14 | gamma radiation. As you can see , the the intensity that received is |
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82:23 | to the atomic number or the or element that's scattering. The atomic number |
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82:29 | related to the bulk density. And number one from this is just the |
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82:33 | density line. This gives us just the density of the formation. |
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82:42 | I'm gonna quickly go on here for second. What does that manifest itself |
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83:02 | ? So here's here's the Yeah school can stop for a sec. Usually |
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83:34 | meeting is being recorded. So once we've got that density is being is |
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83:43 | weekly to velocity, velocity is related typically the age of the rock, |
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83:50 | depth of burial, how old it . Just because as we bury a |
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83:55 | and compress it and let it It just gets brittle and rickety and |
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84:01 | and Bridget. And then there's relations mud rock line or the Castano |
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84:09 | which just says that shear wave velocity typically linearly related to p wave |
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84:16 | These are all empirical background relationships that just generally true. What we're often |
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84:25 | for is actually when they're not true excursions or anomalies that we're often looking |
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84:35 | . In other words, I'm often looking for average or background. I'm |
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84:40 | for an accumulation. I'm looking for that's different than average, a little |
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84:45 | different than average. But these averages us a ballpark cast. Okay, |
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84:52 | plug some numbers in the game to a little exercise. So we said |
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85:02 | Gardner's relationship from a lot of cross , just logs that were from the |
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85:07 | , coast velocity, log a p log, a dead sea log. |
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85:14 | cross plotted all those and came up this relationship. So we can say |
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85:27 | according to the relationship Dere is .31 philosophy. The quarter power. |
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85:35 | Suppose we made a measurement on the and it was 3000 m/s and we |
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85:42 | have a density like. So I'm gonna look at What does Gardner |
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85:47 | So if we plug 3000 m per and that, what does gardeners say |
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85:52 | the density should be that get to a calculator in this one too? |
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86:10 | , Okay. And so this question a little bit of a tricky |
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86:15 | So Gardner says 2.3 and then we a measurement, we took a core |
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86:25 | or We sniffed around and we actually a densely log later on. And |
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86:30 | said 2.5 then what was our So 23 five. Yeah, I |
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86:49 | remember. Well, in fact you do it either way really, you |
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86:55 | say the error from actual or the from approximated. So you could pick |
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87:04 | two. So yeah. So Gardner this case gave 2.3. The error |
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87:27 | about .2 And that's just under So this is just really to to |
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87:37 | the mechanics again and twist it slightly . So, and you might say |
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87:42 | this case Gardner was an empirical I didn't know anything about density when |
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87:46 | started, but I had velocity, predicted the density, guess what it |
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87:49 | within 10%. Then I went out I Did some more work and I |
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87:54 | a density log and it was not , but it was wrong by 8% |
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87:59 | 9%. So that's one of the that we would do with the empirical |
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88:09 | . And then another thing that we're just again, if I had the |
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88:13 | time here at a certain level and density here and I cross plot |
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88:21 | Then I can determine what kind of it is and maybe even what porosity |
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88:26 | is. And this is what all the application codes would do with |
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88:35 | J if you said, look, gonna pay for my little log. |
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88:40 | you made all these measurements you've logged , but I'm really lazy this |
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88:44 | So you guys figured out and tell what kind of rock it is and |
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88:47 | its porosity is, then it will plotted out and it's going to use |
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88:51 | like this to do that. so now we know a little bit |
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89:02 | about the density log and there's another that's derived from this and this came |
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89:13 | the physics, depending on how energetic gamma rays are. They have these |
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89:21 | processes. We talked about compton scattering a little bit of the photo electric |
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89:25 | , so if they're really, really , they're gonna scatter if they're not |
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89:28 | energetic, they might get absorbed. it depends a little bit this log |
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89:33 | uses both. It uses both mechanisms so when we look at absorption we |
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89:43 | calculate something and it's called a photo effect log and it depends on the |
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89:49 | type. And so from that gamma injection, the density tool we get |
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90:00 | numbers, we get the bulk density we just get this photo electric factor |
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90:06 | maps to rock tape. So photo factor is just another gamma ray absorption |
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90:13 | but we can make a log out it. And so that's done. |
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90:16 | called the pf log. The photo factor log and it maps to certain |
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90:21 | tapes origin role B Yeah, that's . Okay, so but it it |
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90:40 | at a good point all the logging use some kind of acronym or short |
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90:47 | . So roby is typically row b buck density but you've got to write |
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90:53 | out because most of the, most the systems aren't going to have that |
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90:59 | , that's a row font. So just write it out in english. |
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91:04 | roby is just both density. That's it. Yeah. But incidentally the |
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91:12 | these acronyms Pf, what's P. . You know, it's a I |
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91:18 | know what it is but so you're actually look it up. And the |
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91:22 | companies have pages of short farms and . So some of the ones that |
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91:28 | obvious PF is not obvious but it's photoelectric effect. Uh D. |
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91:35 | Cole delta T compression. But each might have a slightly different. They |
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91:42 | some might call it D. P. Or whatever. So you |
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91:46 | have to look it up. Well that's a quick aspect of the |
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91:55 | we can get out of the gamma or density log. It's called gamma |
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92:01 | because I'm going to inject the gamma and I'm going to record a gamma |
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92:05 | gamma gamma And depending on the energy the gamma ray that comes from different |
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92:18 | effects. And those different physics are on different aspects of the atom or |
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92:23 | element. And so I can get map of that element to what I'm |
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92:30 | and then that's the law. All logs have to be interpreted somehow. |
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92:36 | . Okay, so the other really standard log is the neutron log and |
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92:42 | is using another kind of physics. this gets another active source and instead |
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92:47 | cesium. Now we're using hammer worrisome and this guy radiates neutrons. He |
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92:57 | neutrons. And so the neutrons propagates the formation and they bash into the |
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93:05 | and the rock emits gamma rays and we count the gamma rays a |
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93:13 | So how does this work? You remember from first year physics if we |
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93:15 | two billiard balls that are about the size and they collide, there's a |
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93:19 | of transfer and energy. That's the transfer from 1 to the other. |
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93:25 | they're the same size, if one huge and others not, it's just |
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93:30 | bounce off. There isn't much energy or if one is enormous then ones |
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93:35 | . It's just gonna walk right Not much energy. So it's the |
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93:40 | kind of model when you put a through. What's the atom That's about |
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93:45 | size of a neutron? Like So if I'm gonna if I've got a |
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93:57 | here, which is pretty small, what element or what adam is about |
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94:04 | size of just a neutron? like yeah. And what's what's a |
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94:14 | proton? What's the name of a proton? What element is a single |
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94:21 | hydrogen? Yeah. So if I'm neutrons through formation, the biggest energy |
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94:32 | is when I hit hydrogen. So log is looking at the decrease in |
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95:00 | , that's right. So if I've a lot of hydrogen between me and |
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95:07 | detector, it's going to scatter all neutrons and I just don't get as |
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95:10 | neutrons. So I don't count as gamma rays. So when I get |
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95:14 | gamma ray council, when I get neutrons, it seems the interpretation here |
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95:20 | that I've got a lot of So Okay. Yeah. Yeah. |
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95:41 | when you think about hydrogen and you about simple compounds, what has hydrogen |
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95:47 | it? Simple simple hates to it's got a lot of hydrogen in |
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95:58 | . And what else has hydrogen? other simple thing of gas? |
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96:11 | No. Well, we talked about gasses that have different amounts of |
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96:17 | Different amounts of hydrogen, Like Methane is just CH four. So |
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96:24 | has hydrogen then, you know, some other materials that have a little |
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96:38 | of hydrogen in it. But If think of water, water is a |
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96:46 | and so there's a lot of H20 that fluid. Methane has hydrogen in |
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96:54 | , but it's a gas. So has if I've got a water here |
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97:00 | then methane here. Who has more ? Yeah, by far because it's |
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97:08 | fluid. So methane does have hydrogen it's very, very sparse. It's |
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97:14 | gas. So the neutron logging tool counts neutron loss, which we infer |
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97:33 | based on hydrogen content, which we is coming from water, which we |
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97:39 | is filling the ferocity. So, I get very low neutron counts, |
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97:49 | does that mean? Very low neutron a lot of hydrogen. I have |
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98:04 | I have a lot of water, have a lot of porosity. So |
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98:09 | is a straight map from neutron arrivals for all. So that's how it |
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98:37 | Now. Um, if you were kind of an entry technician, you |
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98:47 | say, I don't care. Just me the prostate lock. But you |
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98:52 | , we want to know more than and we can actually use it because |
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98:57 | give you a sonic calculation for We can do a density calculation for |
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99:04 | . And now we've got a neutron for porosity and they're all going to |
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99:08 | different. And so we have to why they're different. And then we |
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99:13 | want to use that difference to for own benefit, for the benefit of |
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99:19 | interpretation. Good. So, um one of the ways that we're gonna |
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99:33 | that, this is jumping a bit . But let's let's look at this |
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99:43 | , we can look at our classic . So the gamma ray is the |
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99:56 | line. And now there's there's a here that goes from 0 to 1 |
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100:07 | . So that means that this line zero and this line is 1 |
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100:11 | That's where the plot is. sometimes if the radio activity got really |
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100:17 | would go off the plot. So the way that they handle that |
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100:21 | to have a wraparound. In other , if I see this, that |
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100:26 | gamma ray is here and suppose it going off the plot, I could |
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100:31 | it around and then I would go 1 25 to 50. This is |
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100:35 | just another way to put more data one graph. So let's interpret this |
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100:54 | . So we've got the gamma we're up here and the gamma rays |
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100:59 | down. Okay, okay. The somewhat big. So this is kind |
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101:13 | moderate gamma ray. I'm coming down and then all of a sudden it |
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101:19 | big time. So we expect that you can see the interpretation here. |
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101:26 | we've got sandstone goes back up once again you can actually see that |
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101:32 | caliper gets less in the sandstone. was that again? Because yeah, |
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102:01 | interpretation is that the wells like the fluid is going into a permeable |
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102:09 | , its permeability. It's yeah, depositing including mud cake which actually makes |
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102:19 | formation the the diameter of the world . Okay, so we're gonna have |
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102:41 | talk about one other thing though before get this, Take a break. |
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102:54 | , exercise time, take a little . So this is this meeting is |
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103:06 | recorded. This is a fair amount stuff too to look at. So |
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103:17 | good to just practice it. So let's do another case and we haven't |
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103:27 | about all this but it's going to us into it. So if we |
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103:33 | up here at this example. So is down 10,000 ft. So first |
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103:39 | all we're gonna look at the units 10,004. Okay. So we go |
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103:50 | to our trusted gamma ray, the line that and we can see the |
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103:58 | ray is here here. So in this log analysis, one of the |
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104:11 | things that we're looking for character and again this there are all these different |
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|
104:16 | , but there's only it's only one . So when you look through this |
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104:21 | if we were in the conventional we're typically looking for something that's |
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104:30 | We're not looking for a shell. you want something clean. So is |
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104:38 | you've got a little bit of help . But if you're looking down |
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104:40 | what intervals are you going to Yeah. And like this is all |
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104:58 | . And then down here at this this is all clean. Right? |
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105:08 | in the way that we're gonna do analysis is again you this is already |
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105:13 | for you. But the idea is pick the top and the base of |
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105:17 | unit of interest. So were immediately in this guy because it's clean. |
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105:21 | we'll pick the top and the base that's done in a then we come |
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105:25 | . Okay, this all looks Oh, I like this. I'll |
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105:30 | that as B then we're still coming and that looks pretty good. I'll |
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105:36 | that whole thing and see and then further just in the base of the |
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105:41 | ray, I'll pick all that So strictly on the basis of the |
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105:47 | ray log we've picked some intervals of . Then we talked a little bit |
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105:58 | the sp log, right about current and and so all these areas here |
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106:04 | will come up the S. Is the solid line. So the |
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106:12 | is there there so the sp. kind of mirroring what the gamma ray |
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106:26 | has said. So why do you that is because hasn't been Garrels? |
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107:06 | remember the sp log is really our log. So it's the voltage that |
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107:12 | and the voltage develops because the brain the formation is different than the fresh |
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107:17 | and the in the mud. So trying to equip great we've got a |
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107:23 | salty formation, we've got a very water in the mud. So it's |
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107:27 | to equal a break the salt and causes that's current flow so that's a |
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107:38 | . It's like philosophy forward. So for right now we're just trying |
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107:46 | really pick where their excursions are because trying to divide, we're trying to |
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107:54 | the levels at this stage. But looking at the sp log we like |
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107:58 | area. So I like A. that this log is helping me pick |
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108:02 | . Because I'm saying there's an excursion there's permeability and then down at |
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108:08 | Do I like be on the basis the sp log. Yeah I like |
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108:13 | . And then this whole C. . Do I like it? |
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108:20 | I guess I'm starting off because we and we like because like they're not |
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108:25 | the line like all of a sudden see is like hugging it now. |
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108:30 | it's because these are completely different This is gamma ray and this is |
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108:35 | . So the and there's a little more here too. But this is |
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108:44 | kicking hard but we like that because means that there's a very strong current |
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108:53 | . There's a very strong voltage drop we interpreted as being very permeable. |
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109:07 | we go down a bit further and get in D and we've got to |
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109:12 | very nice current flow, very nice kick. So we like that unit |
|
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109:23 | . So now the the gamma ray told us what low radio activity and |
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109:35 | sp has told us that slower that is permeability. Okay, so we |
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109:45 | all that. So both those curves into why we picked these areas of |
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|
109:50 | . There were two drivers for, interested in a were interested in |
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|
109:56 | We're interested to see and where it's to be. Why am I not |
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110:00 | in this area? This is this not like big chunks. Yeah. |
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110:12 | there's no there's some but there's no interval in here that's sandy and |
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110:18 | So I'm just not as crazy about . It's not that interesting. So |
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110:27 | we've talked a little bit about the and N. five. What's that |
|
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110:34 | ? This gets back to your roby robe And five. What's 5? |
|
|
110:48 | . So this. Yeah. So fair enough. So that's the |
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110:52 | porosity calculated. And here's the neutron and we get a little indicator of |
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|
111:00 | these guys think they calibrated those logs remember they had, we had to |
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111:08 | what kind of rock it was. what did they tell you what it |
|
|
111:12 | ? And then what's 2.65? Why that there? That's right, |
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111:18 | that's the density of court. So could have said sad, but they |
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111:22 | said this is the number we put there. Okay, and that goes |
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111:28 | zero porosity to 50% porosity from So now assuming that it is a |
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|
111:40 | and assuming that it's brian saturated, logs should agree with each other. |
|
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111:49 | in a lot of areas there, sort of do agree with each |
|
|
111:54 | But let's look at a the density is a little bit lower than the |
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112:04 | porosity. So is that gas density lower. No, we said that |
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112:15 | was the other way around. We . So this porosity is low, |
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112:26 | can see it's pretty low porosity. this interval is low porosity. So |
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112:39 | we interested low porosity not we're not interested because we want volumes. Now |
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113:10 | come down here and we were interested this area. But now I see |
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113:17 | the neutron says really low porosity, the density, This is very high |
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|
113:28 | . Yeah. So you can see we went from the neutron porosity being |
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113:40 | bit higher than the density porosity, is kind of normal. We went |
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113:46 | the other way And this isn't a a little bit. You can see |
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113:50 | , you can see the neutron porosity and the density porosity is here. |
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|
113:55 | is these are 30% different. So did we say would cause that? |
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114:11 | , let's see who's picking up on , gas. So the neutron is |
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114:25 | , hey, I don't see much because I'm not seeing much hydrogen. |
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114:30 | density is saying in the bulk Hey, this thing is getting really |
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114:34 | density. So this is a huge . So that is our flag that |
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114:41 | could be gas. Now, we talked about it yet. But here |
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114:49 | the resistive. Itty logs on this . So we can see that the |
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114:57 | . Itty goes crazy. The resistance getting extremely high. So from what |
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115:03 | know, what did we say about is brian resistive. Yeah, brian |
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115:10 | very conductive. Okay, so it's resistant. It's organic, there's nothing |
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115:19 | about it. It's very resistant. when I saturate a formation with |
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115:23 | does it become resistive extremely. When saturated with gas, does it become |
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115:32 | ? Why not? Three? wait, it's um sometimes this is |
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115:51 | sound good, but sometimes I mix gas because I think of gasoline. |
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115:58 | I don't think of it as like gas? That's fair enough. Call |
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116:06 | methane. But the thing is it's than methane. Yeah, yeah. |
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116:14 | don't think of gasoline. Let me it this way. So natural |
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116:20 | so it is natural gas, no natural gas, there's nothing |
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116:32 | there's nothing electrical of natural gas. if I put natural gas in the |
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116:39 | , do I expect the formation to resistive? Yes, very. So |
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116:45 | you go. We had clean we had permeable, we have a |
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116:59 | major difference which is our gas indicator huge resistive itty in this permeable |
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117:07 | So what do you think? yeah, big time. So |
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117:16 | very, very very gassy. Okay, so let's go down here |
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117:28 | we're getting good at this stuff. let's look at C and C |
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117:34 | So do we like this interval just these guys, do we like the |
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117:37 | to start off with? Yeah, like it, it's clean and it's |
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117:45 | . So I go over here and see this is kind of weird because |
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117:50 | this whole formation, it looks kind uniform, but if I go over |
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117:56 | there's a crossover in the top and overlay of the log across the logs |
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118:01 | the bottom. So what do you ? Perfect overlay here. What's that |
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118:19 | ? It means that all the assumptions made with these prostate locks are |
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118:24 | And what did we assume, What the assumption number one that it was |
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118:30 | and numbered. Foots the saturation. via the assumption that it's bright. |
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118:42 | that's the assumption. So our proxy being bang on that is an indicator |
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118:48 | us that these logs agree and they because it's sand and brian saturated because |
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118:56 | how I did it. So it to me like this is a brian |
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119:00 | sand but this is weird. There's cross over here. And what's the |
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119:08 | an indicator of? Yeah, of kind in particular? No, this |
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119:17 | the same as that. Oh so yeah. So does it make sense |
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119:27 | have gas on top of brian? , gas is gonna float. So |
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119:47 | interpretation here. So that's that's some the porosity logs. Now we haven't |
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119:52 | about this yet but here's a resistive log. And this resisted the logs |
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120:01 | deep into the formation. So when look deep into the formation down here |
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120:06 | resistive. Itty is extremely low and the resistive it is very low. |
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120:11 | do I think the saturation is? well low resistive. Itty city is |
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120:42 | what's resistive et game, this is . Remember it's conductive. Oh that's |
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120:50 | actually let's see yeah. So this low resistive Itty or high conductivity. |
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120:57 | this means if it's low resistive. high conductivity, it means it's |
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121:02 | It's conducted. But then I've got unit again and I go up and |
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121:08 | of a sudden it becomes high Itty same unit. What's that? |
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121:15 | I had low resistive it and then went into high resistive. Itty |
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121:27 | Yeah right here gas. Oh this gas too. So our interpretation of |
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121:34 | is really simple. We've got this sandstone, it's permeable. The bottom |
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121:38 | is full of brine. And then got gas sitting on top of |
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121:43 | So that's classic. This is the example of a gas reservoir. Gas |
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121:53 | sitting on top of brian in a sandstorm. Then let's look at this |
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122:21 | . So we saw that the gamma has a nice excursion, the sp |
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122:31 | some excursion. So it looks like little bit of permeability. But when |
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122:39 | look over here, what does this me about the porosity. Very very |
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122:45 | porosity. So that's there. So we like d probably not. It's |
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122:55 | low porosity. So even if I some hydrocarbon, there's not much of |
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122:59 | and it doesn't doesn't look very So then I come down to deep |
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123:07 | and the porosity ease agree. So does that look like? It looks |
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123:17 | brian saturation. And if I look the deep resistive. Itty the deep |
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123:24 | . Itty for that whole unit is low. So does that conflict or |
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123:30 | that confirm our interpretation. It does resistive. Itty here means that I've |
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123:38 | brian and it's conductive, it's low . Itty. So we don't like |
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123:43 | . We're looking for high register. that that's sort of where I wanted |
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123:53 | get you in terms of this basic analysis. Because if you understand |
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124:01 | then you kind of understand all the log analysis. These are basic logs |
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124:07 | kind of reservoirs were looking for and you can pick them and then go |
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124:12 | there. Now we just to finish , we didn't, I jumped you |
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124:17 | resistive it because it's just kind of to look ahead and eat dessert |
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124:20 | But yeah, that's a lot of . So that is that's pretty much |
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124:29 | you need, the basics of everything need to know in conventional log |
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124:34 | one more question. One more why do we not like ferocity? |
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124:46 | like, okay, so we're saying ferocity. Tell us again, well |
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124:51 | tell me what what what does porosity ? That's right. So do you |
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124:58 | $5 in your bank or 5000? . So if I've got low |
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125:06 | it means I can't have very much in there. And if I've got |
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125:10 | fluid, I've got low money, I've got big ferocity, then I |
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125:15 | fill it up full of oil and got big volumes and volume times |
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125:24 | times dollars. So when you're thinking this, I needed that make analogy |
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125:47 | amount of money you have is directly to the ferocity ferocity is the price |
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125:52 | oil per barrel. So mhm You think of that as straight |
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126:04 | that's, I want big body. , it really is. It's like |
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126:13 | I have $1 in the bank or . Yeah. So I want a |
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126:19 | volume and if I've got a certain of rock and I've got 10% |
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126:29 | Okay, that's a 30%. Always for that. Yeah, that's |
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126:46 | Yeah, because now and that's great you want to slam dunk and whatever |
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126:51 | is for your brain, like instead memorize stuff, remember rise, what |
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126:57 | the most common elements in the earth's ? Well, wait, no, |
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127:05 | most common elements in the earth's It's um it's a granite. Oh |
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127:22 | God, I was literally just talking this with somebody the other day well |
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127:29 | I wouldn't remember either, but uh elements, it's oxygen, silicon and |
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127:37 | . So how do I say? as I said, I can't remember |
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127:41 | normally. But as a kid, favorite lake for canoeing was the Ontario |
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127:48 | of Artists. Like it was called . S. A lake. And |
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127:52 | boom, I'll never forget os a . And that all I have to |
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127:56 | is remember that. That's oxygen, and aluminum. And there you've got |
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128:02 | obscure fact, those are the three elements to there's crust and it's like |
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128:09 | or anything else. So whatever whatever need to do to attach something you |
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128:14 | remember to something you're not gonna that's that's so if you've ever |
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128:19 | I went once to a memory training and it was how to memorize people's |
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128:25 | and they use a technique that's sort similar. It's not really a nice |
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128:30 | , but you look at the they tell you their name and then |
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128:36 | do what's called a psychological snap. attach something really bizarre to that person |
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128:42 | the name and it helps you So Kevin has a giant nos que |
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129:00 | , okay, the bad part about is is that you, that's how |
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129:05 | do it. But then every time look at Kevin, I'm thinking, |
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129:07 | my God, your nose and that's K. Knows and you know |
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129:12 | I guess what it works and Kevin have to know what I'm thinking of |
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129:16 | knows, you just remember, you remember my name, Thank |
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129:20 | So, but it's it's kind of same thing right now, whatever you |
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129:24 | for that snap and everybody understands money typically we want more of it. |
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129:32 | it's it's a good snap and and that's perfect because ultimately why does the |
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129:38 | care about porosity? That's the So, you know, especially the |
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129:48 | , you're you're teaching this stuff and all these kind of things and people |
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129:51 | kind of get away from why are doing this? Well somebody's got to |
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129:58 | some money out of this somewhere or do you know what, maybe |
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130:05 | maybe my daughter my niece is actually and It's $20,000 a year for the |
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130:13 | that As one of my nieces So so you know what guess |
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130:19 | I am motivated to make that $20,000 year more. That's the way it |
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130:27 | . So yeah, I I Whatever, whatever the motivation is then |
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130:31 | good. Okay, so these resisted logs. We just looked at |
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130:35 | It's uh there's some nice physics they're in two ways. One of the |
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130:38 | you can make your resisted the log it's unbelievable this even works. But |
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130:44 | can have a transmitter. So this the end of the tool, this |
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130:47 | in the well we can have the and we send an alternating current through |
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130:53 | transmitter. And you probably remember from back if we've got an alternating current |
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131:00 | a loop that generates a magnetic So that's what happens. So in |
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131:08 | tool it has an alternating current in coil and that generates a magnetic field |
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131:14 | oscillating in the formation. Now the thing happens. So now I've got |
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131:27 | oscillating field magnetic field in the And so that induces I've got an |
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131:39 | oscillating magnetic field and that induces a current in the formation, that loop |
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131:48 | is feeling the resistive Itty of the . And that's where the measurements made |
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131:53 | I've got a current going around in formation that is sensing how resistive the |
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132:01 | is. You know, if it's it's in a brine then there's going |
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132:06 | be a lot of current flowing If it's in a water saturated these |
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132:15 | a non porous area, it's gonna resistant. But the bizarre thing |
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132:20 | so now I've got this current that's around in the formation, but we |
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132:24 | that if a current is oscillating in formation, what does it generate another |
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132:33 | field? And it does. So loop current in the formation generates its |
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132:40 | magnetic field and we're gonna sense that another coil, it's incredible that this |
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132:50 | , but it does. So that's it's called a dual or a two |
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132:56 | tool because we induce a magnetic field that causes a current. This current |
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133:03 | a secondary magnetic field. That magnetic can cause a current in my receiving |
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133:11 | and ultimately the size of the current here is related to the resistance of |
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133:19 | formation. And so this is called dual induction resistive Itty tool. And |
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133:27 | again, the ultimate output is just resistance of the formation. That's what |
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133:32 | does. And so you can't see . But there are those coils inside |
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133:36 | . This is my dual induction Okay, I'm gonna skip through |
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133:42 | Um So ultimately this is what we now. I can I can space |
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133:53 | coils apart a long way and that that the loop and the magnetic fields |
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134:01 | deep inside the formation Or I could those coils really close together and that |
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134:07 | that the resistive it is from very . So one is called a shallow |
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134:13 | deep depending on how far apart the are and how deeply we go into |
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134:18 | formation. So I've got the shallow the shallow focus log atmospherically focused log |
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134:26 | is very very shallow like an inch two into the formation. And then |
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134:30 | got the induction log deep I. . D. This is the deep |
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134:37 | and you can see that they're often similar. Most well logging tools give |
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134:47 | these three tracks. They give you very shallow track, shallow resistive. |
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134:51 | right close to the border wall. usually going to have been invaded. |
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134:57 | there's a medium one that might be two ft away and then there's a |
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135:01 | one that might be a number of deep in the for information. So |
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135:06 | interpret the deep log as the un virgin completely natural formation. The shallow |
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135:18 | , we interpret it as having been with the drilling mud. It's pushed |
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135:27 | out. So what we're measuring there really the drilling mud resistive. How |
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135:32 | you feeling? Um Yeah just depending bit on how conductive the formations are |
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135:47 | normally we would be thinking that the one is maybe I don't know five |
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135:50 | six ft into the formation. The one. You're thinking an inch or |
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135:59 | and then the medium one is is feet. So you can see that |
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136:05 | . They agree. However, how the drilling mud gets into the formation |
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136:14 | on its permeability and porosity. How fluid can I put in there? |
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136:18 | you can see down here uh The ITty measured here in the shallow area |
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136:31 | high in the deep area. The Itty is low. So what did |
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136:39 | say? Low resistive Itty was And what did we say? Hi |
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136:46 | Itty was oil or fresh water. we remember that the mud that we're |
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136:55 | with on land is freshwater mud. it has a high resistive itty. |
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137:01 | does this make sense that the shallow shallow rock should have high resistive |
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137:08 | The deep rock has low resistive Yeah, this is a classic invaded |
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137:17 | . So the invasion has gone a of inches. I measured that it's |
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137:22 | mud. It's high resistive, be . I go into the formation deep |
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137:27 | touched it, It's full of brine a little resistance. So here's the |
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137:33 | signature. We have permeability. The log says we got its permeable. |
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137:41 | sand drilling mud invaded. The deep is all bright. So if you |
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137:55 | to look here for example and you see that there's sand. This is |
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138:06 | this sp log as well as the . So we've got this interval right |
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138:13 | is sandy. It's got a nice kick, We like that and both |
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138:23 | show very high resistive itty. So interpretation is it's an oil saturated |
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138:37 | Let's look up here. The P log is telling us that it's |
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138:44 | . We've got a nice voltage Then we look over here the shallow |
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138:53 | Itty is fairly high. Then the resistive itty is high, then goes |
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139:04 | . Classic brian Haider. Okay, that's that's a fair amount for you |
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139:37 | think about. So tomorrow. let's let's wrap it up. But |
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139:44 | we can go into started on You can go through and just |
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139:59 | just check that you understand. Just a little bit more about, |
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140:13 | That's where I will go through this . Right? In terms of a |
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140:18 | look before the same thing, how right sp gets So, Okay, |
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140:37 | years. Any little any questions No, I just well, there's |
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140:54 | really in all the well logs, 100 years of the physics because everything |
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141:01 | used all the way from linear accelerators electrical methods to sonic. And then |
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141:07 | applied, we're trying to get all very profound physics techniques and apply them |
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141:15 | a very practical purpose. Finding some and there's a lot of that. |
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141:28 | , good. Hello? Yeah. , well, yeah, we'll go |
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141:37 | . What's the story If you have questions then uh let me know and |
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141:44 | we'll go through the log analysis, how far we get tomorrow. And |
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141:52 | in the VSP and a little bit |
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