02:10 | Hello, Maria. Hello, No, I'm here. Good to |
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02:25 | . Good. Thank you. We three people so far. Two |
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02:42 | So yes, 4 to 1. needs. It was like a leaf |
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03:11 | in the background. You guys You hear me? Yes. Has |
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03:19 | Joe doing great. Just tryingto trying move a house, Got everything. |
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03:24 | signed the sign that offer letter. it was like, OK, when |
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03:28 | you start? And so now we're . Have they were, like, |
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03:32 | , moving. I got boxes everywhere crap everywhere. So we'll see. |
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03:44 | a nice ripples in the picture behind . I know. That's why I |
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03:47 | that picture I was in. that's on Arcadia Lake, up in |
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03:52 | . And, uh, it was cool, because you can kind of |
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03:55 | almost looks like some of them uh, like star dunes. Like |
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03:59 | the little Ripper. The ripples are kind of like coming to get, |
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04:02 | , merging. And it's right next the bank right there. On this |
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04:06 | on, May look symmetrical too. was really cool. I went there |
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04:13 | month. We went there, we down to Lake Texoma and then we |
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04:15 | to the witch stalls, and then went to this other crossbar parks. |
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04:19 | been done. I'm gonna getting out lot. Checking stuff. I |
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04:23 | that's what you do when you're right? Check stuff out. Try |
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04:27 | see Oh, there's a girl uh she went toe you, but |
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04:34 | doing a new She's creating a new . Of course for, uh, |
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04:38 | , uh Excuse me. The Arbuckle s So she was looking for |
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04:42 | And the city of Davis owns this property that it's just for, |
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04:47 | off road A TV, riders and . And I went there last |
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04:50 | and there's a bunch of great outcrops , so I sent her some google |
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04:54 | . Hopefully for her to use. good through this. Kawana. I |
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05:06 | just going to ask you mentioned the last week that you were going to |
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05:11 | a email for the Captain project? , and I didn't get anything during |
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05:18 | week. Yeah, I didn't send . I'm sorry. Okay. E |
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05:23 | have a long discussion with with Daniel his specific captain. I still need |
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05:30 | get out a list of the Sounds good. You know that early |
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05:36 | week I'll make a quick note to sure I don't forget it. Too |
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05:40 | things to keep track of. Uh . But do you know from the |
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05:47 | of your mind when, um, going toe wins the deadline? It's |
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05:55 | be, um, uh, Everything to be kind of done by about |
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06:03 | 14th of December. Plus or minus couple of days. Sounds good. |
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06:08 | . Thank you. But I'll send . You know, it's important to |
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06:12 | to give the the your final draft the right up to your advisor, |
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06:22 | , about a week before everything is , and then actually, two weeks |
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06:26 | then and then present it two Gives them a week to look at |
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06:31 | before you give your talk. And then it's nice to have a week |
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06:36 | the talk for any revisions to be . But sometimes we compress that because |
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06:41 | have to. Okay. I'll send the official deadlines. Perfect. Thank |
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06:51 | . Yeah, I was busy doing lot of stuff with scheduling next |
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06:54 | actually, So I got kinda sidetracked some of those other issues. |
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07:11 | Okay. It's one minute late Where everybody? We've got 10 people. |
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07:17 | means to folks are missing. It's not here yet. So everybody but |
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08:06 | . Okay, Well, um, gonna start making things happen. |
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08:11 | he'll show up soon, Okay? don't see the recording controls. Do |
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09:12 | have the control of it? No, I don't have a |
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09:19 | Please make me co host. I see it. It chose recording. |
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09:38 | what I thought. I could see until I started sharing. It doesn't |
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09:55 | Money. It's reporting now. I guess when I stopped sharing, |
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10:04 | see the controls again. Right? , we'll go ahead and get |
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10:12 | Eyes Daniel here yet? Oh, . Okay, we got everybody. |
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10:18 | we're good to go. Okay, today we're going to go through a |
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10:25 | bit of structural geology, and and main reason is just thio, |
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10:32 | you know, look at in a sense. My gut feeling is that |
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10:36 | all just had Stephen Rx class, you should know most of this, |
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10:40 | I'm going to try to put it the context of how we're going to |
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10:42 | using it when we get into frontier and the other phases of the value |
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10:50 | . And, uh, kind I guess from a very broad |
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10:56 | the most significant thing about structural geology Theobald iti to look at, |
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11:05 | various basins around here that have sentimentally in them and how structure actually impacts |
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11:12 | deposits to help the development of a and actually at the same time, |
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11:19 | . I mean, petroleum systems within basin. And that's kind of where |
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11:25 | gonna kind of go with that in this course, we're not trying to |
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11:29 | productive structural geology, but we're trying put structural geology in the context of |
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11:36 | reservoirs and seeing how we can find in the different phases of the value |
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11:44 | . So that's really what this is about. And, of course, |
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11:51 | , simple cartoons are always a good . Things just showing some types of |
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11:58 | traps. Uh, these cartoons seem simple, but in reality, the |
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12:10 | and combinations of these types of traps sometimes make it awfully complicated. When |
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12:15 | trying Thio figure out what's going on the subsurface because any time you have |
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12:20 | fault, you can get spots where were to drill right there you would |
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12:26 | is to excellent potentially excellent, porous and permeable sand stones. Although |
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12:38 | you're looking for on unconventional, you'd coming right through the shale and you'd |
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12:42 | ignoring the stuff you don't want to into. So it all becomes |
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12:47 | but it's also and complicated, but can also be, uh, very |
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12:52 | on what your target is actually is that particular area at that particular |
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12:57 | Because a zai mentioned before when we're and exploiting, um, conventional |
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13:06 | we're overlooking the unconventional reservoir trapped combination are shale bodies tend to create. |
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13:17 | , so this is another one of diagrams of a riff system that doesn't |
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13:26 | too unlike the North Sea, which a failed rift. But on the |
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13:32 | scale, you can see that is important to be able to recognize |
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13:39 | these major bounding, uh, false major blocks. But in addition to |
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13:47 | , because of the stresses involved, gonna have minor faults being created all |
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13:54 | it and this sort of scale of big bounding block faults are usually easy |
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14:02 | recognize in seismic, and quite often may have a surface expression of some |
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14:07 | these false. But of course, were working offshore. We way don't |
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14:12 | see any surface expressions of things, but it gets more complicated when we |
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14:19 | looking at these finer grain faults. may be, uh, building reservoir |
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14:25 | compartmentalized reservoir scaled type features. And , of course, is just a |
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14:33 | . And the model is showing kind how you create something that looks like |
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14:38 | . But the model also has the of resolution that allows them to see |
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14:43 | other faulting and fracturing patterns could take . And this is from the Brent |
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14:51 | . And, of course, the the name Brent came from the |
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14:54 | Moronic. He tied the nests and Tarbert sands. And you can see |
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15:00 | right there. You just take the letter backwards, and it ends up |
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15:08 | the the Brent Group. Okay, , um, looking at you. |
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15:17 | , Don, Is that is that Group? Is that the Is that |
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15:21 | the Brent that they use is the for like on the exchange? You |
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15:26 | , it's like wtf, But then like brain. Is that what they're |
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15:29 | about? Yeah, that would be it iss uh, it's oil coming |
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15:34 | there. Okay? And that's why call it Brent. And anyway, |
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15:42 | course it's the West Texas stuff comes ah, lot of the different fields |
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15:46 | West Texas. The Paleozoic units were light oil. Well, relatively light |
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15:52 | . There's sort of intermediate Craig. , um, their light. But |
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15:59 | call them in their heavy lights, they call them intermediate. So here |
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16:03 | , uh, that same thing in view. This is this would be |
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16:09 | Brent here's kilometers. And then in same map view, of course, |
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16:17 | though they didn't show it in this , they're showing that there's a lot |
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16:20 | other false associated with the with the that air created when big fault blocks |
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16:27 | and and other things happen and fall place so you can see that it's |
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16:31 | complicated, and this is kind of two things. We may have major |
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16:40 | along inside of these big blocks, then inside of them in detail, |
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16:46 | , some of those fairways that air arrangements of formations and and charging source |
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16:54 | with reservoirs in those formations, the various blocks inside of here can be |
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17:02 | up in compartmentalized and make particular reservoir complicated than we want it to |
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17:09 | We have a big trap over in where there's a limited number of of |
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17:18 | scaled or finer scaled false A. you get a better sweep or you're |
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17:24 | to drain the formation a lot When you get into an area like |
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17:28 | , it becomes a lot more and sometimes the number of straws that |
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17:33 | might have to poke into it make on economic. Having said that in |
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17:37 | North Sea, a lot of the expiration started out looking at this sort |
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17:44 | scale, and they were finding, , oil and gas reservoirs in here |
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17:51 | where they found the big open areas the larger blocks that were productive at |
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17:56 | low cost of oil. Back when found it, they were doing |
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18:01 | But then, as the price of went up and more of the big |
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18:06 | had already been discovered, people have back in from the UK and |
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18:13 | and even the US, too look smaller blocks smaller. Hmm. Production |
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18:23 | on looked at all this fine detail have managed at higher rates to make |
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18:28 | a good amount of money when the the price of oil is on the |
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18:32 | side rather than the downside. And when you look at a map of |
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18:38 | UK acreage, one thing that's real is they have small, small blocks |
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18:44 | the government leases out at a They've got more wells poking into those |
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18:48 | leases, so they've pretty much been to find a lot of these smaller |
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18:52 | and make them economic one way or by good engineering practices and good, |
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18:58 | , locations. If you think uh, single particular strategy on a |
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19:09 | works everywhere, you'd be wrong and wouldn't be still making some money out |
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19:13 | the North Sea. Okay, just ah, I'm sure everybody is familiar |
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19:20 | a lot of these symbols. It me that after all these years, |
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19:26 | still don't seem to have any conventions . Now, when we have the |
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19:32 | sharp triangular bolts here like this, know that's a thrust fault, |
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19:39 | uh, and of course, it's in the dip of the fault. |
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19:45 | of course, this would be the thrown side over here and hanging |
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19:50 | This would be the football in the , the down thrown side. And |
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19:53 | block over here is actually moving over of sit down, thrown block like |
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19:59 | . Uh, on some maps, see you see an industry that just |
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20:05 | you're allowed to put any symbol you on almost anything, uh so, |
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20:09 | , out of control, somebody might this for a normal a normal |
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20:14 | The pattern that I saw a lot huh, would look like something like |
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20:22 | , or even something like that with filled in on the corner and that |
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20:26 | in. And of course, the that these blocks air on is also |
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20:31 | down dip on the fault. But a normal fault, this'll would |
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20:37 | um, a typical of normal fault this being the down, the down |
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20:47 | , hanging wall in the up thrown . And, you know, this |
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20:55 | this isn't, um I think this in our text. This is either |
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21:01 | our textbook or the shepherd book. think it's in our textbook. But |
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21:04 | is also another way. They they a normal fault. And I've I've |
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21:11 | never seen very many maps that looked that at all. And here's here's |
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21:16 | one same kind of thing. But put these up here just to warn |
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21:22 | that whenever you're working in an uh, it may be, |
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21:29 | completely impossible right away to recognize what of fault it is from the pattern |
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21:34 | here. Because people, uh, know, like Thio make things special |
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21:40 | themselves, and they oftentimes makes it to communicate again. Something like this |
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21:46 | what I usually see and use for , a normal fault and patterns like |
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21:53 | with a sharp point on it to is a thrust fault. When I |
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21:57 | looked at, until I make sure know which way the false really going |
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22:00 | or down on hanging wall or they the football Okay on here is, |
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22:12 | , sort of Ah, a nice in a Brent you can see |
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22:16 | There's kind of a major bounding fault here, But then there's these other |
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22:21 | that are sharing ought off of and and so instead of having this |
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22:29 | full reservoir here, you can see compartmentalization can happen. You can see |
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22:35 | it's possible to drain at least, , get through. Well, what |
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22:39 | contact up to here? Oh, fault there. Then over here, |
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22:43 | might be able to drain over. is an oil water contact up to |
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22:48 | , and this one's on its own that point in time. But the |
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22:51 | is, is that if you don't these kinds of false, it's possible |
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22:56 | put a few wells in the right with the right drainage distance to be |
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23:02 | to drain this entire thing. When put these little extra faults in |
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23:06 | then it becomes more complicated and you to start to consider with the value |
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23:12 | this resource is versus the value of resource. Having said that, a |
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23:17 | of people have gotten really clever, , um, people that worked with |
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23:22 | oil companies and they're not looking for billion barrel fields. They're looking to |
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23:27 | money and sometimes, uh, just if let's ignore this fault down |
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23:41 | If we ignore this fall down here we ignore this fault in this |
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23:49 | we would have a fairly large reservoir might be appealing. Thio larger oil |
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23:57 | with a larger overhead to cover for action it takes. We have smaller |
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24:02 | that don't have that very high That seems to be hard to manage |
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24:09 | , Um, the, uh and we leave these faults in, but |
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24:17 | , still ignore this one. We drain this thing pretty much with with |
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24:21 | well board here in a well bore , up to this point. And |
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24:26 | we could drain this one up to point with the well bore over |
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24:30 | But to get back in here, have to have one well up into |
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24:35 | like this is. But even if drained this all the way up to |
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24:42 | like this, in other words, oil water contact came up to |
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24:45 | Well, I know what water contact up to that will. We would |
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24:50 | little, uh, knicks of oil over. Up above that. |
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24:58 | and this is what we call attic . And often times when we have |
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25:04 | , there's more than one productive And the structure, of course, |
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25:10 | is in three dimensions. It doesn't view and map view. It also |
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25:13 | down. So, um, these this block might be shifting a little |
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25:18 | to the south on this side. , uh, if you drill a |
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25:24 | here, you might be able to several of them. And And, |
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25:29 | course, there are places where we have five or six reservoir layers in |
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25:34 | pain, and someone can come in a straight hole and and drill through |
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25:44 | attic oil, maybe with a little of a deviation. Maybe penetrate this |
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25:48 | here, the next one down the next one down. It may |
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25:53 | here, as this is, this in this direction and this starts to |
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25:58 | out in that direction is we're Well, we're kind of it would |
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26:01 | out, too. It would close this direction, and it would close |
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26:05 | on this direction. So we kind have to move in this direction. |
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26:09 | , if we deviate are well to of puncture, the attic will here |
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26:13 | that attic will the layer below. would shift in this direction and then |
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26:17 | next one in that direction. So little bit of a deviation in that |
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26:21 | can pick it up in Hill Corp an awful lot of this, where |
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26:25 | go into Oldfields with lots of at coil stacked attic oil and so |
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26:31 | And I'll talk about this morning. get into production. But there's also |
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26:37 | way with lateral wells. Thio get a coil that, rather than being |
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26:44 | associate, it might be horizontal. other words, there might be. |
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26:48 | might want to try to hit this oil, for example, with a |
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26:52 | with a horizontal well that comes in and comes in there. And maybe |
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26:55 | more somewhere else from another structure that can hit five or six of them |
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27:01 | one time. So people are actually that game Now that we have much |
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27:06 | control over turning our well, bores to be a very tricky complicated, |
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27:14 | , was a simple thing, but would. You could either get it |
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27:17 | or get it way wrong. Now we can steer the the drilling assembly |
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27:23 | little bit better than a lot better we used to be able to. |
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27:27 | ah lot of these, um, of remedial things that can come come |
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27:31 | in, but this is what we be looking at at the frontier exploration |
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27:35 | . We might not know these faults there and again, Um, a |
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27:41 | starting well in here would be, , anywhere they put these. If |
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27:46 | didn't know about these two faults early in your in your evaluation of the |
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27:53 | . Now, if you decided to in here and do a bull's eye |
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27:56 | I suggested, it would probably be one right there. And and, |
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28:01 | course, for those who were trying get the whole world at one |
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28:04 | maybe you might want to put something here, and you might actually find |
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28:08 | fault and find that particular sand fault out. So locating your well has |
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28:12 | lot to do with how much you about the faulting patterns at that |
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28:17 | And then, of course, not this map, but over printed on |
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28:20 | , you can have faces changes. this is a highly productive sand, |
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28:24 | could have a faces change in Likewise, if it was a, |
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28:32 | , say a source rock. He's always the possibility you can have sand |
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28:37 | come in and mess things up to . They may have been drained previously |
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28:41 | conventional production was going on. Okay, here's something, uh, |
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28:49 | I got from Shoot, and he a big deal out of it, |
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28:52 | I would hope that no one in group would actually draw a map like |
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28:57 | . But when people are looking at and they get especially if you have |
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29:03 | d, you might have Ah, sure if this is a least like |
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29:06 | . This is a leased line, he has a producing field over |
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29:10 | or it could be a seismic But when you have two D seismic |
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29:14 | and sometimes when you're picking points in places, even with three D, |
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29:21 | , frameworks, you may, uh may end up drawing a map incorrectly |
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29:26 | either side of the fault, and this is kind of what this diagram |
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29:34 | , and he's got a normal fault , based on the structure map, |
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29:38 | reversed because someone wasn't paying attention to fact that what's across this side of |
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29:44 | fault has to go up. Doesn't whether you have a data point over |
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29:48 | or not, it has to go . And if you come across this |
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29:52 | of the fault. It's a normal dipping the way it is. It |
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29:56 | to go down. The structure has go down over here relative to that |
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30:00 | . And one things that computer maps always do is is take that into |
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30:06 | lots of times that most of time do. But sometimes they can overlook |
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30:12 | because they're trying to contour this block they're trying to contour that block, |
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30:16 | you may not have that many points it to contour with, and it |
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30:19 | create some kind of crazy thing like . But if if, if you |
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30:24 | figure out and quite often you could a fault plane map, which is |
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30:27 | be in one of your exercises if do a fault plane map, you'll |
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30:30 | exactly if this contour is correct. on all this data over here, |
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30:36 | I go across that map, I know how many feet it has to |
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30:41 | to get to that side of that interval of rock across the fault. |
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30:46 | other words, if the throw is ft, then the contour on the |
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30:51 | side of this has to go up ft, period. Um, it's |
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30:56 | a matter of conjecture. It Zagato if you have a good handle on |
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31:01 | fall plane map and you know what throw is And structures over here in |
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31:06 | data over here you rely on, the structure over here you do not |
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31:09 | on, but you're trying to come with a play. Uh, because |
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31:13 | your wells air down here, make sure that you take into account this'll |
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31:18 | a really good data point. For , this is minus 5800. And |
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31:25 | I knew that fault had a throw 400 ft, then actually it looks |
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31:33 | it's less than 200 ft, but assume it was 400 ft. That |
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31:38 | this point here has got to be ft lower than the point on the |
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31:42 | side of that fault. And, , and that's one of the things |
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31:46 | you can you can count on. when you're making a map, if |
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31:50 | lack data points, you can put points. If you have a good |
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31:54 | on this side well controlled with you can put points on this side |
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31:58 | the map until the computer to make that they honor that. Because that |
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32:04 | a really consideration that you need to . Okay, so a lot of |
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32:13 | you're gonna everybody's had structural geology with . You're all in this semester, |
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32:22 | everybody just got that class. how much did he talk about using |
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32:28 | at the frontier scale. Anybody have idea he talked about? He talked |
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32:37 | frontier. Um, but I think was talking about them Just Justin when |
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32:42 | talked about riff structures or rich I don't think I don't e don't |
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32:47 | we talked about any, like, thrust belts or any frontier. Any |
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32:51 | didn't think he gave any specific explanations , like, Frontier Place for that |
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32:56 | . E think he did mention it to rip basis. Okay, I |
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33:00 | he has a lecture on pressure and seals, and, uh and I |
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33:07 | know if he's Did he happen to you, um, about the different |
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33:16 | of seals He mentioned the term membrane ? No, he mainly mainly when |
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33:26 | talked about seals, we did show ratio clay smear potential. And |
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33:30 | uh, hey, gave some case but I don't I don't think I |
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33:34 | think that you mentioned, uh, seal. Okay, that's really |
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33:37 | He worked for Shell. I know at Exxon knows what a member Exxon |
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33:42 | knows what a membrane seal is. pretty sure pretty sure folks from BP |
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33:48 | because they merged with Amoco and they some pretty sharp structural geologist from |
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33:54 | So I'm pretty sure they also know a membrane seal is. It's a |
|
33:57 | important concept, and so So when get to that, I don't have |
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34:01 | worry about it being a repeat. may challenge some of what what Steve |
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34:08 | to you, but it's it's actually challenging. It's just adding more |
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34:13 | Um, so he probably talked a bit about this right? Fractured reservoir |
|
34:22 | . He talked. Obviously, Unfortunately, most of my examples they're |
|
34:29 | be from, uh, intentional or alot of basins. I'll mention the |
|
34:39 | type, and I'll mention some of significant things about the styles. I'm |
|
34:44 | mention that now, but then I'll into this in more detail when we |
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34:48 | get get past some of the tools get into actually get into frontier |
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34:55 | Then it comes back into play when get down into development and production. |
|
34:59 | because structural geology is really important And it's really important up here. |
|
35:07 | , but but and how many of did he use? Uh, he |
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35:12 | happen to use the book by Alan Alan, did he? It's not |
|
35:22 | of you have had Jolanta Van Wickes , right? Yeah, a couple |
|
35:28 | so you you will different aspects of I'm going to say. You've probably |
|
35:34 | up some of them from Jolanta because understands tying basins and structural styles Thio |
|
35:42 | Systems. And that's kind of what getting into and here, So just |
|
35:49 | I'm gonna briefly go through kind of petroleum? Excuse me? Why? |
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35:54 | geology is important in petroleum geology, just to make sure everybody's on the |
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36:00 | page and we're thinking the same things examples. E never know what fault |
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36:08 | people use, which is why I that up. Just make sure, |
|
36:11 | know, like, if I'm showing slide and you're confused, which block |
|
36:16 | is, uh, the hanging And what the relationship is between the |
|
36:22 | wall on the football in terms of motion. Just just holler when I'm |
|
36:27 | so we can get it straightened out it's awful to listen to an explanation |
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36:31 | you think it's a thrust fault and actually talking about a normal fault. |
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36:37 | of might throw your brain off. , so the main basin types are |
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36:43 | settings, convergence settings and transform And I'm assuming that everybody here has |
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36:51 | some form of plate tectonics. Course if not anything specific, you at |
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36:58 | had a freshman geology course that went the basics of what these different settings |
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37:05 | . So I don't have to go great detail When I teach this course |
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37:08 | engineers. I have to explain to what plate tectonics is, and sometimes |
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37:13 | amazed. And almost everybody is amazed paleo magnetic bands coming away from a |
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37:21 | rich. But we won't have to that in this class. I don't |
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37:27 | , and so s so what I'm to do with these three things is |
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37:31 | kind of give you an idea of ? You should already know what they |
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37:36 | of look like, uh, in section. What they kind of look |
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37:40 | like from the surface and what it in terms of potential de positional systems |
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37:48 | or base an infant. How it of controls just some of some of |
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37:53 | . When we get to frontier expiration look at a little bit closer frontier |
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37:58 | and exploration. We start looking closer closer to these details. But for |
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38:04 | lecture, we're just gonna have a look at kind of what it means |
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38:08 | the big picture. Okay, so have these things called divergence settings. |
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38:19 | in these can someone tell me what of the major faults we're going to |
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38:26 | in a divergence setting? Arma Okay. How does everybody else feel |
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38:34 | that? Yeah, I agree. just I wish the whole class was |
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38:40 | front of me, so I could , kind of get a nice |
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38:44 | What? What? What's going on your heads? But anyway, of |
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38:49 | , the major ones, quite often rift basins, uh, inter catatonic |
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38:56 | . And then these things we call margins. And, of course, |
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39:01 | passive margin eyes gonna have remnants of base. And with sediment NFL coming |
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39:08 | top of it. Of course, Gulf of Mexico is like that, |
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39:11 | the Gulf of Mexico has a incredible of thermal subsidence going on and deposition |
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39:20 | load subsidence going on, which makes a depot center with more than 50,000 |
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39:29 | of sedimentary rocks, which is pretty . And here is sort of the |
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39:38 | of a Rift Valley with the grabbing the middle. And of course, |
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39:45 | doesn't seem like much, but it on me at one point in my |
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39:50 | . You just look at a block . How can a block diagram be |
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39:53 | you much? Well, if if look at this block here, can |
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39:59 | look at this block here? This is getting wider at the top, |
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40:07 | this block gets wider at the And so if I push this down |
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40:12 | push these two on either side I'm putting surface area that's longer closer |
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40:21 | sub surface area, which is longer it has to stretch. There's no |
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40:27 | around. It has to stretch the of the crust, and that's what |
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40:31 | areas areas air showing. And of , when it does something like |
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40:37 | this is really nice and friendly in with, you know, this flat |
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40:42 | up here on a flat plane up . But what is this kind of |
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40:46 | you over here? Slim? It's like a pancake over here. Sitting |
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40:54 | off to the side of the river looks like a big terrorist or |
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41:00 | but it's It's almost like a nup . Uh, I'm not up for |
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41:05 | , but it's sitting higher than everything . Yeah, it's sitting on top |
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41:07 | this. So it is a right? So what? It's not |
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41:11 | you, but what it actually implies that sediments up here, this is |
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41:16 | is another one of those tough geological . It's hard to understand, but |
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41:22 | rocks pop up, they erode. when they fall down, they fill |
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41:28 | and eso when this pops up this pops up that goes down, |
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41:33 | gonna be erosion. And the great and wonderful world of surface on this |
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41:39 | is it's always trying to do something call peanut play nation. It's always |
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41:43 | to try to level things out with here in deposition down there, And |
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41:50 | as time goes on and layers fill over top of this. That's what |
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41:53 | going to see. You're gonna You're to go from the structure. If |
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41:57 | stops moving, you're going to see basically filling and level out. And |
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42:03 | the key is is that it's creating . This erosion is going to create |
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42:08 | reservoir rocks, an organic material that's fill into the basin that might |
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42:14 | and invoke and promote organic productivity as fills in with water. So it's |
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42:23 | important to hear this is like somewhere the the Southwest us where you have |
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42:33 | horse and Robbins and all of this above sea level right now. So |
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42:39 | have the mountain ranges from the worst the robins in the middle, and |
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42:45 | I'm pretty sure maybe maybe it doesn't you this way. But if you |
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42:50 | at a diagram like this and you these kinds of fault blocks, |
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42:57 | see this ledge up here? Where my pointer? That's the high point |
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43:04 | a block and this is a block down. So sediments gonna be dumping |
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43:08 | of here on this diagram. It's , yeah, what's he talking about |
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43:12 | ? This one which is just a clay model that shows you some incredible |
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43:17 | there. In fact, what's in subsurface is you can see that some |
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43:22 | block actually went like if you had the amount of section and the the |
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43:29 | Ness Tarbert ness Rather, this block have been up like this, so |
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43:34 | would have been a higher peak at time of that blocks. Motion like |
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43:38 | would have been just like that. , those little tiny edges on a |
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43:44 | don't seem like much. But if look at it here, those little |
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43:48 | edges on on either side or mountain you know, in other words, |
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43:55 | of feet of relief over here to sediment into their. So when the |
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44:00 | Sea was forming like this, on those those edges of the blocks |
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44:07 | I showed you, the Tarbert in nest popping up, they're not little |
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44:11 | . Their mountain ranges on either side of the blocks coming in. So |
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44:17 | that structure is doing is creating a credible source of sediments cause it's going |
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44:24 | and it's going to be eroded and incredible amount of accommodation, space down |
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44:30 | that can get filled in with And when that happens, we get |
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44:35 | nice de positional systems. If we happen to have this going on, |
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44:41 | , in an area like a Rift that becomes inundated with ocean and |
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44:46 | ah, source rock in there, gonna have a lot of different configurations |
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44:51 | reservoir and source rock potential. of course, everywhere there's source rock |
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44:56 | . There's there's unconventional resource potential as as conventional from this instance. |
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45:05 | so the North Sea itself is sometimes the failed rift. Sometimes it's called |
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45:10 | blockage in, um, I never so picky about my plate tectonics terms |
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45:15 | I really is new, why one better or the other. I know |
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45:21 | get upset when the wrong term is , but by and large, the |
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45:26 | Sea was a failed rift. If take West Africa and East Brazil, |
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45:34 | , you have on either side of you have passive margins, which included |
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45:41 | kinds of rift ing that you saw . But it's spread apart, and |
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45:47 | pre rift and rift sentiments here are going to be connected to the pre |
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45:54 | in uh, sin rift sediments But when they were being deposited, |
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45:59 | were connected by a much smaller lake then ocean, like the East African |
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46:03 | Lakes are exactly like the beginning of opening up of the South Atlantic. |
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46:10 | then there's these other basins that air called sag basins. Uh, I |
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46:16 | at the end of the day, more we learn about it's gonna be |
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46:18 | related to drifting than anything else. the basin's basically have some kind of |
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46:26 | uplift which caused them to sag in middle and and then the and then |
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46:35 | thermal uplifted fractures. It starts to back down just like the North Sea |
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46:41 | after riffing. And you end up , uh, a lot of accommodation |
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46:47 | post rift sediments to fill into. here is just showing you some rift |
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46:56 | . Active rift in going on The Sea is a big one. You |
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47:00 | a triple junction down here with a ridge here in a spreading ridge |
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47:05 | A. To this point, times looks like these are gonna be, |
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47:11 | , more or less failed riffs. the big one down here that's forming |
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47:14 | Red Sea still a significant riff And if you go to the south |
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47:20 | here, you'll you'll run into Your Ethiopia. There's a triple junction |
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47:25 | that runs into East Africa, and have riffs there trying to form in |
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47:30 | East African Rift Valley. A present and whether or not they ever get |
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47:36 | , we won't be able to be to find out. But, |
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47:39 | the thermal sources and the magma sources shift. And sometimes, like in |
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47:45 | North Sea, you end up with that doesn't move very far. The |
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47:49 | Sea might be a little bit more the Red Sea and the fact that |
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47:53 | opened up to create the North But then it stopped spreading. God |
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47:59 | there. Is there production, in the Red Sea or the Gulf |
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48:03 | any of those areas? You know I mean? Yeah, in the |
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48:05 | of Suez, there is, and gonna show you some examples. |
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48:08 | I'll show you. I will show an example from the Gulf of |
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48:14 | And because, uh, I didn't didn't work. Um, yeah. |
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48:22 | I had to work in Africa because the Middle East because because of some |
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48:27 | the specialties I had, nobody else do it. But But Amoco |
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48:33 | um, outside of outside of which was the U. S. |
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48:40 | basically Canada in Alaska. Outside of , we had Europe, Latin America |
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48:47 | Far East. And I managed a expiration group for that. But every |
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48:52 | and then I had help with people Africa and the Middle East, and |
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48:56 | did have sort of And I think company is still there now that they |
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49:01 | . But it was called up Coz the Gulf in Gulf Oil and Petroleum |
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49:06 | and, uh and that was sort a mirror of Amoco, Egypt and |
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49:15 | for everybody. We had an office the U. S. Cup Co |
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49:18 | a person in the office from and, uh, as it turns |
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49:23 | , they work really well together and were able to find a lot of |
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49:27 | . Ah, lot of it got after after BP merged with amateur, |
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49:32 | a lot of production was going on to that as well. So |
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49:36 | there is something there, but I pulled some examples in here from |
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49:40 | literature just because Because I knew this , ah, highly productive area. |
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49:46 | not aware. I'm not saying there anything here, but I'm not aware |
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49:49 | much going on in the Gulf of . There's anything. Okay. And |
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49:56 | is where I was showing you the and Robbins in the US And this |
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50:01 | , um, this long, this extension all basin. But if something |
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50:08 | this wherever too to sag enough and ocean came in, you'd have all |
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50:12 | of source rock developments sitting on top all these, um, more or |
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50:18 | buried mountains. And, you you see real features. You'd see |
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50:23 | sorts of alluvial fans coming in and and rivers. What you wouldn't see |
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50:31 | something, uh, kind of highly closely associated with the marine setting that |
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50:35 | good marine source rocks. But you have some non marine source rocks like |
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50:40 | turns out in these extension all basins China and sometimes the reservoir Iraq's, |
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50:48 | example, in a Bohai base. they have these paleozoic buried hills instead |
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50:53 | the types of mountain ranges we have . They had lots of carbonates sit |
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50:58 | and eroded and end up being very . Uh, pills that were buried |
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51:07 | a scene there, Paleozoic or actually and Permian. I believed. And |
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51:12 | were buried by Eocene Lake sediments. there's es in lake sediments. Charged |
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51:19 | Paleozoic, um, reservoirs that air on either side of it. So |
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51:27 | , what I'm trying to get at this kind of thing. Creating an |
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51:32 | has a whole different sort of source potentials, like in the North |
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51:38 | Uh, they don't have preserved a good luck custom system in the If |
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51:46 | was East Africa and excuse me, Africa and eastern Brazil on either side |
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51:54 | this, a rift ing area, , in the South Atlantic when those |
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52:03 | contents were together. I hope you mind me using North America for for |
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52:09 | North Sea in a in a South example. But if this was the |
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52:14 | Atlantic forming on, we had Africa here in Brazil over here. |
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52:21 | I guess I should say South Uh, when these two places were |
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52:27 | together, like down here, they these non marine lakes that filled in |
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52:31 | tremendous non marine uh, source rocks you go into North Sea When all |
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52:37 | was going on, uh, some was going on in the middle and |
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52:41 | ocean came in and you got the of a lot of source rocks that |
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52:46 | sort of penny contemporaneous with the features were forming in the structure and the |
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52:53 | that was coming off. So yet pouring into a marine basin that had |
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52:58 | shales being developed so slightly different But the same the same types of |
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53:06 | that you might see in the course the of the two contents of Africa |
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53:12 | South America. You have these tremendous marine source rocks feeding all of the |
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53:18 | on top of it, uh, in the North Sea Uh, you |
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53:23 | sinned. De positional, um, rocks forming. So the timing of |
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53:30 | source rock versus the the the reservoir is a little bit different. And |
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53:38 | , of course, there are multiple of source rock development in the North |
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53:42 | because there was some developed before rift even began so but at the same |
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53:48 | , these extension all settings like this , like the North Sea and like |
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53:54 | South Atlantic. The tectonics and the themselves are actually creating certain types of |
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54:04 | of sediment. Source oil source. , sediment distribution and therefore reservoir development |
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54:12 | are all kind of controlled in a of the same ways simply because of |
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54:17 | fact that it's the same major type basil formation. Okay, here is |
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54:25 | more of a close up with the and range, and you can |
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54:29 | um, again these air mountains, air mountains, these air mountains and |
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54:35 | cross section, these little ticks on edge. Uh, in that |
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54:40 | they didn't have this erosion because the was instantaneous when I showed you the |
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54:46 | . But the the Tarbert and Nests that was up here had the same |
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54:51 | of erosion on top. So you've this uplifted mountain range. It's eroding |
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54:55 | filling in the basin down below. the actual structural configuration on the large |
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55:02 | is affecting the formation of reservoir rocks through here on a smaller scale. |
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55:09 | again, because this is the basin range, and we don't have significant |
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55:14 | rocks under here. Uh, we're not creating sin de positional source |
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55:22 | the sediments that air forming in If there's an area where there was |
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55:27 | rift oil source and you take it 30 million years, you might be |
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55:32 | to see whale migration coming up into there. And also these sentiments here |
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55:38 | their buried deep enough to contain the of the hydrocarbon. Okay. And |
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55:46 | , here's another one showing you and I'm going a little bit more |
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55:52 | detail with with these rotated fault blocks it's something that I see because I |
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55:57 | . I've seen a lot of because work in a lot of normal faulting |
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56:07 | . But here you can see you things going like this, and in |
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56:11 | places past you get the oil But in other places, sometimes these |
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56:18 | out and you actually have sort of up of sediment on this side. |
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56:24 | fills in on this side because the of sediment infill in the timing. |
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56:30 | example, uh, this this unit was formed pre faulting This unit was |
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56:37 | pre faulting, So this unit became sandstone, and when it faulted, |
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56:42 | became a trap. And so timing a lot to do with this |
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56:47 | Whereas if I had a different situation while the faulting is going on, |
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56:53 | deposition is happening. In other it's This is sort of like something's |
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56:59 | in up here. But the reservoir down here in this picture. And |
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57:06 | we kind of have this rotated fault coming along here and we can see |
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57:15 | , um, a lot of the is trapped. In which block? |
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57:22 | would we say the seal for that is primarily on all three of those |
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57:37 | ? Which block would it be No, I mean the update block |
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57:46 | be ceiling ceiling, madam to Okay, I think I think you |
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57:54 | . Let me try to make it little clear. Say, we get |
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57:56 | of these, these three right and just look at the configuration. |
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58:02 | is the football block, and the block is the trap. I get |
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58:08 | of this one and just let this go out and I get rid of |
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58:11 | one again. It's the foot wall trapping. It has the trap in |
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58:16 | . The trap is the seal. this fall plane, Right. So |
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58:22 | I have a seal a shale seal a fall place shale seal in a |
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58:29 | plate. But if But in this , if I'm trying A if if |
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58:35 | doing it the way they like to appraisal wills, uh, you might |
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58:40 | way out here and missed the darn . But if you knew this was |
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58:45 | on Ah, And again, this why you use geology and structural geology |
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58:51 | figure out where you gonna put your . Um, if you have this |
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58:55 | of configuration and you can see from structural geology, this is the way |
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58:58 | should be than the thickest oil leg going to be right here. And |
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59:04 | need to come in behind the fault the thickest part of it. To |
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59:08 | that resource, that would be your . Well, they're not there. |
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59:14 | I drilled over here and this this a lot like the the North Sea |
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59:18 | that I showed you last time they , they actually drilled here through this |
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59:26 | and missed. Missed the things. they got They got the sand across |
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59:31 | least line and they missed the sand the oil on the Amica leased line |
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59:35 | they drilled right here. Then they back and tried to find the oil |
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59:39 | contact. And they drilled down here maybe caught another fault. In some |
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59:44 | , they never found the mother Ah, when when you look at |
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59:48 | like this and you know this is structural configuration and how your base in |
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59:52 | form. In other words, these stones are pre faulting not not sin |
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59:59 | or post faulting their pre faulting. their post faulting it would fill in |
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60:03 | this and the thickest part would be here, it would be on the |
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60:06 | block. But here, here, trap is in the football. This |
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60:13 | is in the football. This trap in the football because this is filled |
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60:17 | there is possible trapping. Or there could be draining from here into |
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60:22 | to fill that if the end of day the trap is in the football |
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60:29 | . Okay, But if you though I think if you if you |
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60:34 | something like here where you can get ramping things where you have basins filling |
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60:42 | , send deposition, we over here one over here so they're kind of |
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60:46 | from each other. But then we to another thing, which, which |
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60:51 | you can't explain the value of a fault to petroleum exploration in the entire |
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61:00 | chain. Then you really aren't paying to any of the fundamentals of petroleum |
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61:07 | . And, um, this word means spoon shaped. And here you |
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61:11 | see something that kind of has a shaped to it. Okay, and |
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61:17 | know, some say, Well, the spoon, or this is the |
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61:21 | or even that's the spoon. But But what's happening here that's different from |
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61:32 | , thickening on the hanging wall relative the layer thickness on the football? |
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61:41 | . And and so this creates a of things. Um, sometimes it's |
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61:51 | over here, so this is the reservoir. But the trap maybe over |
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61:55 | with one of these anesthetic faults. often times we get some kind of |
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62:02 | , a rollover. Actually, you a drag like feature, and so |
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62:06 | have a high here in the thickest of it, and so it ends |
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62:09 | trapping up on this side instead of over on that side. You also |
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62:15 | get complex roll over. That creates lot of other things. But what |
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62:20 | have going on here, uh, we didn't have here was we didn't |
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62:28 | sin deposition into something that could be a source. Rock. Okay, |
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62:35 | there it is. It's already been . It's faulted, and it's created |
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62:39 | trap. It has to be charged dip. And this possibly was charged |
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62:44 | that. This possibly was charged before rotated a little bit more here, |
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62:49 | so it didn't get completely filled. other words, this could have been |
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62:53 | migration going through here. Okay, in this system, it's completely |
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63:02 | Um, as deposition is occurring, this is uplifted and eroded, it's |
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63:11 | into the accommodation space down here as slips and slides along the glide playing |
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63:18 | here. This is probably salt down , and it happens sometimes, but |
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63:23 | doesn't always have to happen. You always have to have assault plain. |
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63:26 | you do have Cem glide down here this sentiment is filling in. |
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63:34 | this fault is trying to trap And source rock is being deposited in |
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63:38 | the reservoir rocks. So you basically all the elements of a petroleum system |
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63:45 | time you have a growth fault of significant thickness. Here's another thing out |
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63:54 | Shepherd and his cartoons sometimes or more the point you can see here. |
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64:02 | got this growth fault sliding like and because it's sliding, it's depositing |
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64:09 | it's sliding. It's thicker on this because this this is rotating and this |
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64:14 | thinner. And this this kind of out because sediments pouring in here, |
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64:19 | , that's fanning out here. You see it's interrelated with maybe during a |
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64:25 | of high stand, it filled in a source rock and then with a |
|
64:29 | stand. It filled in of this little bit of a low standard filled |
|
64:35 | with this, which is almost the same size. It's like not |
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64:40 | has gone on here. But when displacement occurred, Ah, while that |
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64:46 | was occurring, this was away from source of sediment. This was right |
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64:51 | top of the source of sediment, this rotation that goes like this is |
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64:56 | more and more accommodation space. Thio more and more reservoir rocks to capture |
|
65:02 | coming out of of these so I see a real growth period here. |
|
65:07 | don't see much of a growth period , but I see a definite growth |
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65:10 | in this in this layer. So likelihood of having traps over here is |
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65:15 | hot. Okay, so everybody get points. The the main thing is |
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65:23 | growth fault Has sin deposition? At the same time, we're creating |
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65:35 | space. So it's not just the in of accommodation space. It's the |
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65:41 | in of accommodation space, while it's growing from the movement on that |
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65:47 | And of course, sometimes it's considered sediment load may have something to do |
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65:52 | now, later on, when we at some of these in more detail |
|
65:57 | I still don't know for sure of actually gets into it. But when |
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66:02 | have a growth fault, all sorts stuff can go on over here with |
|
66:06 | faults and whether you have dragged, would look like, like take this |
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66:13 | . If you had dragged going you might have the structure coming up |
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66:16 | this so you would have an uplifted like that. It can happen with |
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66:19 | sand unit to that happens sometimes, , you get a thing called Rollover |
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66:26 | this slides down a little bit which is quite frequently happens, and |
|
66:30 | get a a a rollover Anne Klein here where this unit would sort of |
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66:38 | up like that and then come back like this. And so you get |
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66:42 | a little bit off the fault, lots of things can happen. But |
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66:46 | , this is how, um, profound. A growth fault is in |
|
66:53 | of development of petroleum systems. You're in an area with growth faults or |
|
67:01 | . Uh, you always have a opportunity for something like this to happen |
|
67:06 | something like that toe happen where you an uplifted thing. Uh, you |
|
67:14 | see this isn't really what we would the growth fault, but it's creating |
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67:19 | asymmetric amount of accommodation space in this here. As this thing rotates, |
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67:25 | not really unnecessarily of the same thing a growth fault, but at the |
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67:31 | time it is, it's creating new space in here. And in |
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67:37 | um, in this particular diagram, were probably ridges that came like |
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67:46 | and they eroded down into the And so this this sandstone is |
|
67:53 | uh, pre rift to instead of , roof and sin de positional. |
|
67:59 | again, depending on the timing, can get accommodation space being created sin |
|
68:06 | early in a rift system or it be sin referendum. And here no |
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68:15 | is going on. But we're having , uh, of this unit down |
|
68:22 | that and kind of pushing up over , and you have sentiments filling into |
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68:30 | more significant accommodation space. Okay, you actually hear it, iss, |
|
68:38 | I thought this was in Ah, 11, but I guess I have |
|
68:44 | here. This is just showing how drag you could get dragged going down |
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68:50 | way or roll over because it's falling here. Here's a big dump, |
|
68:55 | different. But here you might be , uh, trapping structures up here |
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69:01 | this one, you're gonna have a structure off here up against the fault |
|
69:06 | comes up like that because you can it's slowed down and it's getting |
|
69:10 | different type of rotation on the on surface is along the fault as it's |
|
69:17 | down here. And then probably at point, There's no further emotion in |
|
69:20 | fault, so you can see an of stuff that's slowed way down. |
|
69:26 | , had had more opportunity to roll . And here's something where you're just |
|
69:30 | the accommodation filled in, uh, you would if this was post rotation |
|
69:44 | and filling it in that way. pretty much the same type of overall |
|
69:50 | formation. One major fault. Through evolution of that fault, the location |
|
69:55 | the traps can migrate, change and in total, you have sentiments pouring |
|
70:04 | at low stand and you have a rock jails, fooling and enduring |
|
70:09 | And so your footing source and reservoir next to each other. It's almost |
|
70:14 | good is getting oil out of, source rock. In fact, the |
|
70:20 | is much better. Here's just another , um, showing how it could |
|
70:29 | a little bit different. Here is con cave roll over where you you |
|
70:32 | the traps up here and, and so that's a little bit |
|
70:37 | This is to convex roll over here you're forming the traps in the |
|
70:42 | Anne Klein. It's off the Most of the fields I've worked on |
|
70:49 | been this type of structure right And this is just showing you how |
|
70:58 | can change through time from from one to another. Here, here, |
|
71:05 | can see we're gonna be leaving traps here. But as you get to |
|
71:08 | point, there's gonna be traps up on this end of definitely right in |
|
71:15 | . Definitely writes this down here. probably migrated up there. Okay? |
|
71:24 | there's something closer to home. um, something that I find really |
|
71:32 | is, um, in the Gulf . A plan? You have a |
|
71:36 | of these, um, what they a major boundary faults and sometimes certain |
|
71:44 | . Uh, these were different targets . Different types of Here's the expanded |
|
71:49 | zone. Spanish fall Soon. Here's expanded fault zone, but as thes |
|
71:55 | air rotating and time's progressing. In words, here's the timeline. Here |
|
72:02 | another timeline and see, there's greater here. You're getting much more expansion |
|
72:09 | , and, uh, here it's of stabilized because this this is stopped |
|
72:13 | . It was rotating at one point time. It has become a stable |
|
72:17 | of the shelf here. We're still rotation up into the Vicksburg and lots |
|
72:24 | rotation in the Vicksburg here. So really seeing, um, in this |
|
72:30 | setting over 40 to 50 miles. seeing the development of these growth fault |
|
72:39 | That air giving us targets down targets here, targets here targets there |
|
72:46 | targets out here For the most not much is going to be happening |
|
72:49 | there once it's that's kind of settle that. Except, you know, |
|
72:53 | gonna have a good layer cake system there and, uh and, |
|
72:59 | more frequent the erosion surfaces and high surf intervals as you go in this |
|
73:08 | . Whereas here, you're gonna have continuous deposition three times, at least |
|
73:13 | the Vicksburg Group, and it's going be expanded in here. So |
|
73:18 | um ah, we're getting, during the infill. We're getting a |
|
73:26 | of expansion of reservoir rocks during phases you're not getting that roll over and |
|
73:34 | stand, you're going to be getting water source rocks being deposited in between |
|
73:42 | again. This these air normal growth and another expression. An example of |
|
73:51 | growth faults create so many, types of what we call plays and |
|
74:01 | different intervals in time over the course the development of the space. And |
|
74:06 | it's also creating a same time source, rock and traps. And |
|
74:14 | they're all close together, migration, pathways become a little less confusing. |
|
74:24 | , so the next thing that we at is gonna be, um, |
|
74:31 | settings. And consequently, I think I can do this you guys were |
|
74:43 | quiet. You could all be, , out sunbathing in the backyard right |
|
74:48 | for all I know. Let's It could be watching in some |
|
74:54 | Yeah. There you go. I know why, but every, |
|
74:58 | every device I have if you go , there's There's a tremendous amount of |
|
75:05 | from just wind blowing and I can hear anything when I'm outside Mhm. |
|
75:21 | I need to say stop share. . And now I can see |
|
75:54 | Okay. Okay. I can't quite if everybody's back or not. We |
|
76:38 | I'm back happened. Some of you . I'm over here. Okay. |
|
76:49 | Mhm. Don't you predicted some online . It's kind of dark. |
|
76:54 | I got dark. Sun's going I don't know if that's any better |
|
77:04 | not, And yes. Okay. , uh, now we're looking at |
|
77:14 | we're going to do a quick look convergence settings. Of course, I |
|
77:17 | up front, just like Steve. spent most of my time and intentional |
|
77:28 | , but in convergence settings Ah, ah, it's a whole lot more |
|
77:38 | . There's lots of weight, lots ways. Thio, uh, make |
|
77:48 | types of reservoirs and resource is But also a lot of unique ways to |
|
77:53 | Very large resource is the proper setting large petroleum systems to develop on. |
|
78:07 | , of course, is an ARC . We've got convergence. And of |
|
78:12 | it has unassociated intentional back, our rift ing complex that might develop and |
|
78:22 | can see the rotated fault blocks from rift ing Azan example. But when |
|
78:29 | think of these were thinking of the going on, uh, in the |
|
78:33 | Eri predator prism here, uh, more or less land in the landward |
|
78:42 | away from the actual trench that's forming the crust here is going down, |
|
78:48 | plate is moving across and we're getting faulting create a Christian Eri wedge right |
|
78:56 | here so that you can get, , lots of sediments and source rocks |
|
79:01 | of in place together over here in area. And you also have of |
|
79:09 | basin right behind it that can can some. Resource is, and sometimes |
|
79:15 | might get large carbonate build ups back here too, which could be a |
|
79:20 | useful now, Ugo to places like . I I did kind of handle |
|
79:30 | , Latin America and Far East, the far is definitely, uh, |
|
79:36 | little bit to the South. You into a lot of these types of |
|
79:40 | and these were in places quite often were almost is politically difficult. Let |
|
79:49 | see if I can put a little more light on my face. Here |
|
79:54 | go almost as politically difficult to deal as they were geologically difficult. But |
|
80:02 | lot of research went in here. lot of technology went into these types |
|
80:06 | things, and sometimes they were rewarded massive oil and gas fields. And |
|
80:14 | know working when I worked at Mobile had some big gas fields associated with |
|
80:20 | types of settings, but, uh that Zafar, as I really got |
|
80:28 | looking closely at these things. in Venezuela, you have some things |
|
80:33 | start to look a little bit like uls systems. And they are compression |
|
80:37 | systems, and I'll show you some of that later on in eastern part |
|
80:43 | Venezuela. But I'm not gonna rattle for hours on this particular type of |
|
80:55 | . But I will say if we back to this one, you |
|
80:59 | as you move to the right of page and head down dip in |
|
81:04 | Uh, the same kind of thing still going on with younger units things |
|
81:10 | are younger than Vicksburg for reservoir And it's kind of migrating out over |
|
81:16 | of, um, post salt, , deposition of source rocks and also |
|
81:28 | lot of other growth faults later than . And, of course, you |
|
81:31 | a lot of features related thio salt , which include, um uh, |
|
81:42 | escaped created structures. You have salt gets in placed and detached in |
|
81:50 | And of course, you have divers create all sorts of wonderful structures as |
|
81:55 | . So you have kind of an imprint of this tension, all basing |
|
81:59 | salt tectonics. Add it on top it. Which makes one of the |
|
82:03 | why the Gulf of Mexico is definitely super basin. If we have to |
|
82:08 | it is fine, But, you , I think everyone knows. |
|
82:15 | And here, of course, we compression of stress in my very simplistic |
|
82:22 | again of this, Just like what did with the heart, the the |
|
82:27 | fault or attentional stress blocks you could here. The hanging while now moves |
|
82:34 | top of the foot wall instead of down in front of it. But |
|
82:40 | you look at this block, you see I have this much distance down |
|
82:47 | and I'm moving this shorter distance up yet another shorter distance. And if |
|
82:56 | pick a fixed point, pick a point anywhere, not just where the |
|
83:00 | ends. Uh, what you're really eyes. You're putting short stick of |
|
83:07 | block against a short stick of that and your shrinking the crust, and |
|
83:12 | why it's compression. And here's some of a close up. It's an |
|
83:23 | things showing you a lot of different of deformation, so I just kind |
|
83:29 | put it in here. But this is a reverse fault, and you |
|
83:36 | see different things happen underneath it relative the the burial, depth and temperature |
|
83:44 | where it happens. And here we ductile deformation underneath it. And here |
|
83:47 | have brittle deformation above it about this here. If it is, and |
|
83:54 | we can see the fault going up with additional brittle things. And here's |
|
84:00 | some things we're not getting so much deformation like this, but these air |
|
84:06 | to appear. So you're getting sort a fold over here is as this |
|
84:11 | of pushes up in this direction and get a rollover based on the drag |
|
84:16 | this side of the block. So the kind of thing that happens. |
|
84:21 | here you can see that same thing with with the Thrust Fault. And |
|
84:26 | course, thrust fault is just a angle reverse throught fault. And if |
|
84:32 | don't pay attention, you might call reverse faults, thrust faults. But |
|
84:36 | ones that the ones that are doing are, um, again putting the |
|
84:44 | end of the block here closer and to the short end of the block |
|
84:49 | to a massive extent where these things kilometers long and, uh, where |
|
84:57 | can end up putting Ah, very rocks on top of excuse me much |
|
85:04 | rocks on top and keep saying it . You're gonna be putting younger rocks |
|
85:10 | top of these older rocks down The colors don't help, but this |
|
85:15 | have been way down here, and would have been a higher blue than |
|
85:20 | blue. Okay. And here here , uh, showing you one of |
|
85:30 | great ways to form basins. And congressional thing is things called foreland |
|
85:35 | And, of course, uh, Denver unit and most oil companies. |
|
85:42 | don't know how it's working today, things were very tough right now, |
|
85:49 | should be improving pretty soon and even in the the long near distant future |
|
85:59 | the short near distant future. But know, like a year or two |
|
86:04 | , the industry could be changing But But in the heydays, which |
|
86:10 | ups and downs, too, the offices of all the oil companies often |
|
86:19 | the place of people that, had four point. Oh, is |
|
86:24 | grad school. And they had, and they went to Ivy League schools |
|
86:32 | because oftentimes they were given their choice where they wanted to go. If |
|
86:36 | company had a Denver office, they use to go to Denver. Office |
|
86:40 | of you work with Chevron. They've most of their California offices, but |
|
86:46 | would want to go live in So all these, uh, really |
|
86:52 | places to live attracted a lot of caliper, uh, geoscientists. That |
|
86:59 | of focus focused on these more specific more complicated problems. And all the |
|
87:06 | , those of us working in the Coast in the North Sea and places |
|
87:10 | that intentional areas we did, did a good job of paying the |
|
87:18 | . And most of the Denver I would imagine have been closed by |
|
87:24 | . And a lot of the California have been closed because the bread and |
|
87:28 | is still in these these big super . And I'm not saying there aren't |
|
87:33 | compression of super basins, but some the massive super basins are in fact |
|
87:40 | , um um, places that air rather than convergent. Okay, on |
|
87:51 | is kind of how some of them . What happens is You get these |
|
87:56 | sheets like this loading up on the is it loads up on the |
|
88:00 | It, uh the weight and these air, kilometers thick and there, |
|
88:08 | know, a couple of kilometers thick maybe tens of kilometers long. And |
|
88:12 | put a great amount of mass on edge. And there's a down working |
|
88:16 | the structure that causes basins often like and eso here again. You're creating |
|
88:23 | mountain ranges up here that they're feeding here. You're getting runoff in this |
|
88:27 | . And when you have ocean development in some of these Foreland basins, |
|
88:36 | could get well developed marine source which has happened a lot Course during |
|
88:42 | Cretaceous. There was a lot of was an oceanic seaway through here, |
|
88:48 | before then, much of the area was in the Paleozoic. We had |
|
88:53 | lot off submarine deposits being laid down this area too. And then those |
|
88:59 | started to they form sort of the thrust. And then and then as |
|
89:04 | occurred, we got the inland sea and you get a lot of |
|
89:09 | And in the United States, But Foreland basins all over the world. |
|
89:15 | of the unique features about them is and you see where the thrusting |
|
89:23 | You tend Thio, develop thes elongated on you can see three initial Foreland |
|
89:33 | out in front and then some of piggyback basins in the back can start |
|
89:39 | form. And for example, it's you this one. And here we |
|
89:43 | a section here showing you this one that one, Uh, they tend |
|
89:49 | be, ah and somewhat limited scale this direction, and they seem to |
|
89:54 | more elongated in this particular direction. so that's kind of what you |
|
90:01 | So there could be really significantly sized . They could be small, but |
|
90:06 | not like what we see in the Coast, where you have basins basically |
|
90:12 | king around the coastline of of onshore and offshore, putting down these |
|
90:22 | faults all over the place. And as you get little bit later in |
|
90:26 | development and younger sediments, you get tectonics having a major impact on what |
|
90:33 | going to see. So there's nothing about some of these when you find |
|
90:38 | good reservoirs. But again the overpowering that you can see from something like |
|
90:43 | Gulf of Mexico. It's kind of to compete against both in, um |
|
90:50 | , pre rift post rift in, , sin rift, an post drifting |
|
90:58 | on with inside the Gulf of There's all sorts of tectonic still going |
|
91:05 | with a lot of subsidence. Here have sort of isolated type things set |
|
91:13 | , and these were going to be kilometers long, so you can have |
|
91:18 | of reservoirs in here and lots of in here. But again, it's |
|
91:22 | like something the size of the coastline Of of Texas. And you can |
|
91:29 | can drive in 100 miles in some to the north and still be in |
|
91:34 | regime, and you can drive hundreds miles offshore and still be producing, |
|
91:41 | would be way above the scale of of these limited, uh, Foreland |
|
91:47 | and piggyback basins that get formed in Foreland Basin and congressional systems. |
|
91:54 | then another one are the transformed Yes, and of course, that's |
|
92:02 | we have parts of the crust moving and we get these things we called |
|
92:10 | intentional transpiration a Laure transportation all. that's what some of these are |
|
92:19 | And it's kind of showing you in early stages of it, have these |
|
92:25 | forming Gulf of Aqaba and the Dead and the Sea of Galilee. And |
|
92:32 | course, this was a drifting arm one point in time, and it's |
|
92:37 | toe slip. Aziz Growth, continues here and in a little bit |
|
92:44 | here. Sure, but this trans rotational or pull apart basins happen |
|
92:55 | there's some gliding going in one direction gliding going in another direction, and |
|
93:00 | kind of pulls a unit with it kind of opens up these. He's |
|
93:06 | holes. Um, again, I'm very simple vernacular here, but but |
|
93:14 | types of basins really are large holes appear on the Earth, earth |
|
93:20 | and just just to give you an , um, it's a little more |
|
93:26 | than that. But But here you see, uh, sort of an |
|
93:30 | map where where we have the San fault moving here on the San Andreas |
|
93:37 | here. And, uh, you're things moving in opposite directions and you're |
|
93:43 | up pretty much large holes in the . And this thing, uh, |
|
93:51 | see a scale over here. So is this is over 9000 m thick |
|
93:56 | sediment and the age of these Um, primarily Miocene and younger. |
|
94:10 | let's see, where is it? , you don't even really get down |
|
94:24 | Now here's the palace scenes right So almost all of this is my |
|
94:29 | scene and younger, this sediment Phil I don't know how good the scale |
|
94:35 | , but, uh, in this it discusses, I recall it discusses |
|
94:43 | nine kilometers of sediments, and this happened in the Miocene. And so |
|
94:48 | you think a growth fault is this is pretty incredible. But if |
|
94:54 | remember everything about that growth fault setting there are a number of different growth |
|
94:59 | settings and configurations that I was when were you get something going on |
|
95:06 | marine sediments and when some places in rift where you can start out with |
|
95:11 | marine sediments. But based on kind what I said about, uh, |
|
95:22 | growth faults, this looks like it be even better. And so some |
|
95:28 | these are. And if you start in a setting where it might have |
|
95:35 | a rift basin it first and got good marine sediments in their first before |
|
95:39 | started opening up for reservoir development. got some source rock in there. |
|
95:45 | might be better, but taking a at this, why do you think |
|
95:49 | Ridge basin might not be very perspective oil exploration? No source off. |
|
96:01 | no source. Rock. But if got a source Rock, where would |
|
96:03 | have to come from? It would to come from this San Francisco |
|
96:09 | Paleo Xenia seen formation down here. But this all happened in, |
|
96:20 | 26 million years. So this was was at the surface along not too |
|
96:26 | ago. So what do we, what do we end up with? |
|
96:32 | in here. In terms of for example, if this was this |
|
96:41 | gonna be a source rock, What be the largest concern there in terms |
|
96:45 | developing in a source rock? there's it's not mature enough. Probably |
|
96:50 | have enough sediment on top of it be your burial depth to the |
|
96:54 | Yeah, and if and if and know, having said that, you |
|
96:58 | , in the right and the right in here on the right crank. |
|
97:03 | possible that some part of this was deep enough to mature before all of |
|
97:07 | happened. Because, remember, we're of like sliding some of this younger |
|
97:14 | away from, uh, younger. , you know, it is the |
|
97:20 | unit that's right down in here when . And down in here. When |
|
97:24 | holes this stuff right around here eyes has to have been a potential source |
|
97:32 | . And it has to have gotten . Almost. Um, you |
|
97:38 | I had to be near maturity before this happened in this particular case in |
|
97:44 | little corner of these two. And so? So that's one |
|
97:51 | And what do you think critical issue be for the, you know, |
|
97:54 | Air Shales thes air accustomed Shales. , what do you think? |
|
98:02 | the problem might be there for these terms of developing good. The custom |
|
98:10 | rocks thermal maturity. Okay, thermal would also be another issue. |
|
98:25 | But what else could happen? Could be highly fractured? Okay, |
|
98:35 | that could happen, but e but something that you can't. You |
|
98:40 | probably guess that this as Bigas These you know, that's nine kilometers. |
|
98:48 | you know, it's only you know , Maybe 10 kilometers across I |
|
98:55 | it's big, but it's it's not the shelf of the Gulf of |
|
99:00 | And if you so and it turns I had to do other research on |
|
99:07 | , but we determined that this was marine like hydro chemistry in these lakes |
|
99:14 | when they were saline. And if didn't get evaporated enough to become |
|
99:21 | they probably wouldn't have developed an But if they got saline and they |
|
99:25 | anoxia, it would be, the Marine, uh, chemical |
|
99:31 | which will give you T O. s, uh, no more than |
|
99:35 | at the max, but usually somewhere 2, 2.5 toe four. And |
|
99:41 | , of course, they're all So that's a dead giveaway. I'm |
|
99:46 | that you was that you, to pointed that out as if |
|
99:50 | D. J d made some points well. I think that might have |
|
99:53 | JD. Okay. Well, thanks, because that is an important |
|
99:57 | . And this is something that lot exploration. Geologist Rover looking because, |
|
100:03 | , they thought because this was a deposit, Pretty large deposit, very |
|
100:09 | . Ah, lots of rapid You know, lots of good reasons |
|
100:14 | source rock to develop. It's still only Miocene in age. And so |
|
100:21 | development of source rock from here and from this pale Eocene, which probably |
|
100:27 | not buried that deeply, even the Paley has seen down here probably |
|
100:37 | Well, it isn't mature enough it turns out, but it would |
|
100:40 | been mature enough, but lot of . It's overlooked the fact that this |
|
100:44 | just too young to do anything. there was another reason why uh |
|
100:50 | it it couldn't be, uh, maturity away and you put all these |
|
100:55 | elements in here. This could be like the Green River formation where it |
|
100:59 | matured. But it could have oil , not shell oil, but oil |
|
101:06 | . And it didn't. And the it didn't is because the chemical pathway |
|
101:10 | the waters in here, because of type of runoff into this space and |
|
101:16 | sodium chloride, dominated on calcium dominated setting, which would create appetite and |
|
101:25 | would pull phosphorous out of the system sink it and keep it out of |
|
101:31 | water column. Ah, to a level, it would reduce it in |
|
101:35 | water column and reduce the chances. the propensity for the algal blooms to |
|
101:40 | massive all the way through time and end up with high T. |
|
101:46 | C s and a saline sailing and where you where you would have Mira |
|
101:53 | or that's not non overturn of the and get I didn't get a lot |
|
101:59 | organic productivity. They got preserved. there's a whole lot of things. |
|
102:04 | say this should be a good basin very perspective. And then there's maturity |
|
102:09 | then actual source rock actually forming in first place. Eyes inhibited here is |
|
102:19 | , okay. And then we have things, uh, that we might |
|
102:26 | . Not sure why this is in . All but yes, in |
|
102:28 | All we could get lots of fractures things get offset where you don't have |
|
102:35 | , but you have in Phyllis And if it happens to be organic |
|
102:39 | and it's not cemented, you can create fractures. It might be full |
|
102:42 | hydrocarbon. Okay? And I know we're here. Because we did. |
|
102:49 | did. Um, we go back the beginning slide. We did, |
|
102:57 | , are passive. Margin are active , and now we're doing the the |
|
103:03 | slip margins. Now we're going to . What was after that was taking |
|
103:08 | look at faults and fractures. So we are. And of course, |
|
103:14 | , here you have an issue um uh, some shale smear |
|
103:21 | some shale smear here. And what this call here? What do you |
|
103:30 | gon in here in the catalyst IC that the rebels there, It's kind |
|
103:35 | like a rouble zone. In other , there's you're getting You're getting, |
|
103:41 | , rock fracturing going on on a scale. You're getting stuff broken up |
|
103:48 | . The shale is this is in case, the sandstone would have to |
|
103:52 | brittle. Um, if it you know, cross faults, we |
|
103:59 | always have this. We're not always deep. And we don't always have |
|
104:02 | , uh, in the Gulf of . For instance, if you're looking |
|
104:05 | a playa seen reservoir, you're not have brittle sand stones. So that |
|
104:09 | happen. But if you have some , longer buried sediments, you're going |
|
104:13 | get some catalysts is going on You can see um, some stuff |
|
104:19 | that's going on inside the shell smear it's it's deeper here or maybe somehow |
|
104:24 | brittle. So you have some brittle and you have some ductal motion of |
|
104:29 | shells. So you see a lot this going on taught with fractures and |
|
104:38 | fractures. And then in this it's kind of a fault zone with |
|
104:42 | going on around the fault zone. I think it's important. Remember that |
|
104:47 | often are zones, and not always one point, but to make it |
|
104:53 | for our minds, we we often a single point features or linear |
|
105:00 | and they are, to a certain , linear. It's like and here |
|
105:05 | can see another one to There's gonna places where you can see some gouge |
|
105:13 | here in places where it's not He's a little bit in here a |
|
105:17 | bit, and you can see It's just lining this whole thing |
|
105:21 | That's a close in the oil business , you know this is probably no |
|
105:28 | than 10 centimeters thick. If that we're looking for things that are a |
|
105:34 | bigger than then something here that's less a meter. She okay, So |
|
105:49 | going to go into a great amount detail. Or maybe you did in |
|
105:52 | class. But natural fracture orientation is that oftentimes people worry about in |
|
106:07 | But what I find and what a of my students have found, So |
|
106:11 | often the layout of your acreage sometimes which way you're going to drill |
|
106:20 | So in reality, sometimes orientate ing wellbore orthogonal e to the fractures |
|
106:30 | uh, sort of the smartest thing do. But oftentimes you don't have |
|
106:34 | chance to do it. And, , I know they're documented instances where |
|
106:40 | don't want to do it or Italy, you want to do it |
|
106:43 | . And, uh, from what heard and seen and read that seems |
|
106:49 | be less less common than than having that's at right angles to your wellbore |
|
106:56 | it kind of in general it enhances fracturing you do because you're kind of |
|
107:04 | line with the stress field that formed fractures. But the and then in |
|
107:12 | cases, it seems to not make lot of difference. People, |
|
107:19 | start out with something sort of a degree angle of the primary stress plane |
|
107:24 | the fractures. And then they and they find out, lo and |
|
107:30 | um, when they can get to part of acreage where they can open |
|
107:36 | and drill it more directly, and a right angle, they find |
|
107:43 | it makes no difference. So there's something to be said for this. |
|
107:48 | there's something to be wondered about this terms of the settings in which you're |
|
107:53 | in. And and a lot of has to do, of course, |
|
107:57 | , uh, the orientation of past fields and current stress fields. And |
|
108:03 | think also so the brittle or plastic of the rocks you're working with and |
|
108:10 | layering of brittle versus plastic, nature of the rocks relative to, |
|
108:18 | you know what you're actually trying to out of? So, uh, |
|
108:23 | can be a complicated story, but know in, uh, when all |
|
108:27 | this began and like, say, 28 to 2012. Ah, lot |
|
108:33 | people were trying to drill, they're laterals at right angles to to |
|
108:41 | natural fracture orientation. And and it's after doing that for a while and |
|
108:46 | forced to not be able to do in areas where where your acreage just |
|
108:51 | in line with something, uh, miles long in that direction. You |
|
108:58 | , you have a skinny thing and miles long in one direction and two |
|
109:03 | across in another, you kind of to line after wells with the five |
|
109:07 | long access of your records. And after doing a lot of that. |
|
109:14 | lot of people have come to the that sometimes it's important, and sometimes |
|
109:17 | not on. Sometimes it could be if you go the wrong way, |
|
109:24 | it is a setting where lining up the fractures is useful or whether it's |
|
109:32 | . But having said that, I three diagrams, and any time I |
|
109:40 | three of anything, I like Thio test questions out of them, and |
|
109:54 | here is kind of what happens. where is the primary stress field |
|
110:02 | Uh, in this normal faulting Vertical. It's vertical. So this |
|
110:16 | what's that Greek letter right there. one. There you go. |
|
110:23 | Um, so you're Sigma One uh, sort of parallel, but |
|
110:31 | is a little bit of bleak to in vertical, but the motion, |
|
110:36 | the most part, is vertical. other words, something has to move |
|
110:41 | , and something has to move If you have a fault, they |
|
110:45 | show the offset over here. But that's going to be what happens |
|
110:49 | What about these joints? Also Okay, there Vertical. And they're |
|
111:01 | they're also, um here's another Yeah, I also Rizzio. |
|
111:10 | But there they extend like this but they're also orthogonal to the weakest |
|
111:20 | field. Right? And they're also thing, True with this vertical would |
|
111:29 | , you know, think about Almost everything has to be. But |
|
111:34 | , primarily, uh, you you don't you don't see anything forming |
|
111:42 | the sigma to which you see, , something parallel to sigma One perpendicular |
|
111:49 | sigma tive. Okay, this one parallel two sigma one perpendicular two Sigma |
|
112:01 | . Well, excuse me, Sigma . I'm sorry, reading my number's |
|
112:09 | . Okay, so it z the and the weaker stress direction. |
|
112:15 | What happens here? Yeah, this like a spokes on. I'll take |
|
112:26 | one is like, uh, So what we have here going on |
|
112:32 | , um it's pretty much the same except turned on its side. |
|
112:39 | uh so, uh, you can here that the false themselves are moving |
|
112:50 | because you can see my hands. pushing something over top of something. |
|
112:56 | instead of this way, it's this . And so that's why it's in |
|
113:03 | that direction, but still mechanically, , if you were to take this |
|
113:11 | and flip it up in that direction down in this direction In other |
|
113:15 | push that up that down it would the same as the diagram we had |
|
113:20 | the other fault situation. And um And then what's happening here? |
|
113:33 | is our wrench faulting or our attentional regimes are trans, intentional, rather |
|
113:43 | intentional trans compression. Here, it's if you took this diagram and pick |
|
114:01 | end up and flipped it over with on the bottom. So again, |
|
114:08 | it Z. It's just basically showing where the where the stress fields are |
|
114:15 | in the orientation of the block When is vertical one is lateral, |
|
114:23 | , in one direction and one is in another direction. But you can |
|
114:29 | here, uh, this is if you look at that. In |
|
114:39 | words, this is This is the stress field in this direction, it |
|
114:45 | to be we're toggle to the stronger . Right? And of course, |
|
114:54 | you put that all together, the fields can help you figure out which |
|
114:57 | you would want to fracture. But a test question, I might |
|
115:02 | I might show you these blocks and you Thio, figure out what? |
|
115:06 | the primary stress field would be in way. What direction? So if |
|
115:12 | look at these for about five you should be able to get at |
|
115:16 | one question right on the next Okay, so we're gonna go to |
|
115:22 | next lecture. Mhm. Not another slideshow. Okay, okay. So |
|
116:10 | we're going to start looking at basic tools. So, how many of |
|
116:16 | have had Mike Myers class so Something like half of you, |
|
116:31 | Maybe only Joe. Okay, so think Colin, I would have had |
|
116:44 | , too. But this is probably review for you or maybe even even |
|
116:51 | . Uh, a lot of times we start out in the beginning, |
|
116:54 | course kind of goes through a lot basic things to kind of help you |
|
116:57 | the other courses. And and normally this semester, this course would actually |
|
117:05 | off structural geology and sequence photography. it didn't this time because of other |
|
117:13 | because of schedule conflicts. And I normally teach whenever, uh, there's |
|
117:20 | opening S o, I usually move schedules around to fit everybody else. |
|
117:25 | then I fall in where that and that's what happened this semester. |
|
117:30 | nevertheless, we're gonna take a look this, Um, especially for those |
|
117:36 | haven't had, uh, Mike's class . And anyway, um, nowadays |
|
117:45 | have, um, a lot of were done. Mwd I think if |
|
117:51 | drilling a conventional well on, it's to do wire line. You probably |
|
117:57 | do wire line, but in a of cases, particularly when there's high |
|
118:02 | offshore and stuff like that, people to do MWD to make sure they |
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118:06 | something out of the ground in case problem pops up and, uh, |
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118:12 | drill assemblies Now, uh, they a lot of directional control on these |
|
118:19 | . You don't need a whip stock get him to turn, And once |
|
118:22 | turn them, they don't just stay one direction. You can. They |
|
118:25 | , But you can move them uh, like putting differential force on |
|
118:32 | the hydraulics. And and so the thing about these things is that you're |
|
118:42 | it while you're drilling. Especially like you're doing laterals, um can kind |
|
118:47 | keep you in in the bench or sweet spot that you're trying to drill |
|
118:52 | than while wobbling north of it in of it into, ah, non |
|
118:57 | formations. Nevertheless, most of our because of the way they're made, |
|
119:09 | know, we have something that's like . I guess I'll show you another |
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119:14 | . But most of time we're looking out from whatever this line is. |
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119:20 | very hard for us to look forward in front of the drill bit, |
|
119:25 | we're getting better at it. uh, we're finding also that since |
|
119:32 | can turn these things that we could farther out laterally. It kind of |
|
119:36 | us a heads up as to what's to come horizontally of, because we |
|
119:43 | turn fast enough to get to And I'll show you some more diagrams |
|
119:48 | that just to make it easier. , um and there's ah, the |
|
119:57 | problem with MWD tools still is that not sure if they've gotten better |
|
120:03 | um, the bandwidth of getting information . But in the beginning of MWD |
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120:10 | they're very creative with with mud pulsing send a signal and the signal back |
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120:19 | the receiver. Um and this changes the time. And I don't know |
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120:25 | if there running, um, the through the pipe now or or some |
|
120:33 | of, um, well, did or wire, But I know. |
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120:41 | when I first started doing this, weren't doing it. So in the |
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120:47 | Ah, a lot of these, , a lot of the tools that |
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120:51 | use we couldn't use on MWD. now the band with has gotten such |
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120:54 | thick and you can start doing, , a little bit more telemetry than |
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121:00 | could in the past. And so it's getting to be the thing the |
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121:04 | that we do all the time, it is more expensive, okay? |
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121:09 | I don't know if any of you been involved in logging runs and logging |
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121:13 | I used to have toe sit Wells a young geologist, which was always |
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121:17 | lot of fun. And, my job essentially was to piss off |
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121:24 | company man and the tool pusher so could get data out of the |
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121:28 | And I want you to know, did a good job of that. |
|
121:32 | , uh, if if they yelled me loud enough, I would call |
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121:38 | management, which was always easy to and let them talk Thio, my |
|
121:45 | and my boss's boss until they were in doing what we wanted them to |
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121:50 | . But so I didn't always leave on friendly terms. And I remember |
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121:58 | of my first trips, um, back on it, I probably should |
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122:02 | sued the son of a guns, they put us in a crew basket |
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122:07 | drop us on a on a supply . It was going to take us |
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122:12 | to shore. And what we didn't was, uh, they like to |
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122:19 | games. They used to like to dangerous games out there, but I |
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122:24 | most of that's been stopped now. of the favorite things for crane operators |
|
122:30 | to get out and move the crane the helicopter was trying to land. |
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122:35 | I think more than a few words exchanged with a lot of the helicopter |
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122:44 | . Um Thio kind of make And I think some of the I |
|
122:48 | you know, I hate to say , but they probably had to create |
|
122:51 | to get people to behave. And I know one time when I was |
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122:57 | on a rig the helicopter pilot the the company man and he |
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123:03 | How maney, uh, crane operators you have on on that rig? |
|
123:10 | a guy told him, You three or four and he says, |
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123:13 | , can you tell me what they're right now? And he said, |
|
123:17 | , yeah, I can tell And he told him, He |
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123:19 | Well, I want to see all of them standing on the edge of |
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123:23 | flight deck before I land, and circled for about 30 minutes until they |
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123:29 | got up there. And who knows they didn't switch with somebody, but |
|
123:33 | decided he'd he'd been too close to crane a few times that should have |
|
123:37 | . And so So that was his of dealing with it. Um, |
|
123:43 | then but and the other situation was about We're going to get in this |
|
123:47 | basket and you throw your suitcases inside of you kind of have a crash |
|
123:54 | the with a way of pulling up the like. The crane operator drops |
|
123:59 | fast and the boats coming up on rise on a swell. You're going |
|
124:04 | slam pretty hard. Presumably it won't your suitcase or your bag or whatever |
|
124:09 | is you have. But when that , you definitely want to fall and |
|
124:16 | or, ah, if you have , jump in the water. |
|
124:21 | uh, so what they decided to , which would be a lot of |
|
124:24 | , was they twisted the cable. don't know how many rotations, at |
|
124:31 | 50 I would guess. And they the cable and had it sitting on |
|
124:36 | deck. We put our stuff in , and they picked us up in |
|
124:40 | soon as they picked us up, started spinning really fast and it darn |
|
124:45 | through all three of us off and of course, there's nothing you can |
|
124:52 | when these kinds of things happen. that's kind of some of things that |
|
124:56 | happen when you do a logging And, uh, the last times |
|
125:00 | gone offshore, I was treated like , and the the crane operators were |
|
125:07 | not moving anything at all. uh, and of course, they |
|
125:12 | helicopter rides, so I didn't have get lowered into a boat anyway, |
|
125:17 | of that. But the reason that dio these logging tools basically because they |
|
125:26 | out a long time ago, according really expensive. So if you want |
|
125:30 | see the rock, you have to it in the mining industry. But |
|
125:35 | usually don't go so deep. Almost their stuff is done with course. |
|
125:39 | don't even mess with wire line logging lot, and they have slim, |
|
125:45 | pipe drill systems that can continuously core go down several 1000 ft and, |
|
125:56 | , and pretty much get to see rock, whatever it is, until |
|
125:59 | hit the the sweet spot they're looking for whatever particular mineral it is, |
|
126:05 | they don't have to worry about doing line type stuff. But in the |
|
126:08 | industry, we drill lots of We have to go through sedimentary rocks |
|
126:13 | could be brittle, or they could sloppy. And it's not easy to |
|
126:18 | cores and a lot of these different . And so two things they do |
|
126:24 | they drop wire line tools down, they also will do sidewalk cores, |
|
126:29 | they can put down in a wire assembly. And in the main think |
|
126:34 | this is prostate permeability, fluids and , rock density and velocity. And |
|
126:40 | helps him figure out a lot about gross structure of not only a formation |
|
126:46 | the entire basin that you're drilling And I don't know, it would |
|
126:53 | the entire basin, but you'd be to see the entire section, so |
|
126:56 | be the gross structure of a lot formations. Uh, particularly when you |
|
127:01 | one well to the next will. that's Ah, key thing that you |
|
127:08 | with wire line logs is comparing contrast correlate one log to another. So |
|
127:15 | is sort of a time honored and time, um, important aspect of |
|
127:28 | data that we pull in, for evaluating reservoirs at any end of |
|
127:38 | spectrum of the value chain. so I like to go along with |
|
127:49 | , uh, the classification. It's in the Lewis and swab brought |
|
128:01 | and they divide their basic logging tools rock mythology, tools, ferocity and |
|
128:07 | tools and fluid identification tools. And is mainly because that's going to be |
|
128:16 | they primarily used them for, Especially in basic times when they didn't have |
|
128:24 | lot of extra tools on, they lots of charts and manuals and stuff |
|
128:28 | we could look up. And when did petro physics, Uh, |
|
128:34 | before any of you were born, had had a t i Texas Instruments |
|
128:40 | calculator and I had programs on a strip of magnetic tape, and I |
|
128:47 | evaluate things and cross plot things and all sorts of things. Um, |
|
128:52 | Thio What I'm trying to get at that although the primary thing that these |
|
128:59 | might look at his rock and mythology porosity and permeability or fluid identification in |
|
129:06 | . They also help each other And then, of course, we |
|
129:10 | different tools. Uh, that I mention right here in this first |
|
129:17 | It won't really get to, but a lot of combination tools and cross |
|
129:21 | tools and a lot of actual computer of what it all means. That |
|
129:29 | plotted out in the tools now. they could do that when I was |
|
129:34 | all this. But that back when we were so involved in focusing |
|
129:42 | these specific purposes of the tools, also understood better. Why, when |
|
129:48 | combine them in certain situations, they really well. In other situations they |
|
129:54 | poorly, but in almost all they're not entirely accurate. And, |
|
130:01 | , which makes it not really whether the precise or not. |
|
130:07 | So, having said that, then also going to look at some things |
|
130:11 | pressure tools. Kind of talk about they're important and sidewall sidewalk course. |
|
130:17 | , that can be sent down on line, too. And one of |
|
130:25 | rock tools. You can do other with Gamble X. Besides this, |
|
130:29 | one of the rock tools in a log is its ability thio to distinguish |
|
130:37 | mud versus sand. Uh, and also relates to permeability. But the |
|
130:47 | because mud is very fine grained and coarser grained. Why do we use |
|
130:54 | mud? Just one of those simple that I think people don't always agree |
|
131:08 | or get right. But there really one underlying definition from a geologist. |
|
131:14 | to what? What mud is the size. It's a grain size |
|
131:20 | But what grain size is it? , shells. Did you say |
|
131:26 | Mhm. Okay, well, as , we know there's clay and there's |
|
131:35 | , right? But in this we're not really separating clay from |
|
131:42 | where mud is a combination of those sizes. And, of course, |
|
131:46 | of the reasons why you kind of to do that. If you're a |
|
131:51 | and you've worked with grain size analysis stuff, as unfortunately, I happen |
|
131:56 | have been, uh, lucky enough are unlucky enough to have done. |
|
132:01 | I think I mentioned last week that rarely in a natural environment where you |
|
132:06 | clay particles that are clay sized that's because they don't they don't hang |
|
132:16 | by themselves. they're not loners. flock you late together with other clay |
|
132:23 | . And, um, after looking lots of marine samples in the natural |
|
132:28 | of the saltwater they came out there's almost no five micron particles that |
|
132:36 | confined floating around in the water unless happen to catch a dead nano |
|
132:43 | And oftentimes their plates are a little bigger than five microns. But but |
|
132:52 | mostly what we're looking at when we're at the fine grain stuff in a |
|
132:56 | , we we can simply call it makes it easier for the engineers to |
|
133:01 | it. But as geologist and we know that it's it's a combination |
|
133:05 | clay and insult, but it's those sized particles. Uh, they kind |
|
133:13 | try to suck stuff out of the column and as their flock relating |
|
133:20 | with other clay particles, they also up precipitated things that might contain |
|
133:28 | potassium or thorium, and the spectral log, I think, to a |
|
133:34 | extent, is still, uh, to people. It was toe what |
|
133:40 | can do with it, but these the different sources. When we look |
|
133:45 | a gamma log, we're looking at total signal of this and we're drilling |
|
133:52 | in the Gulf of Mexico. Which of these seems to be the most |
|
133:58 | element that we're gonna find and the reliable is the uranium. It's gonna |
|
134:08 | the uranium one and has a lot do with the development of hot |
|
134:13 | Um, and source rocks. So see that. And of course, |
|
134:19 | , when you get out in the , you can't have You can't be |
|
134:22 | in places where you have this composition again with felt spars. And Arcos |
|
134:27 | which will input a lot of On the other hand, um, |
|
134:33 | can get places where the substrate, , has a lot of thorium in |
|
134:40 | because you've got a lot of highly products and you end up with some |
|
134:44 | night inbox side. There's places in Carolina where these things form, particularly |
|
134:50 | night and in other parts of the Coast, the United States. And |
|
134:55 | in those places immediately offshore, where have run off, you could get |
|
135:00 | like this. So if we we drilling, um, off the east |
|
135:07 | of the United States, we might a bigger percentage of this coming |
|
135:14 | and the way they measure these different is completely different. So you end |
|
135:18 | with kind of different numbers. Eso you try to use the absolute |
|
135:23 | it's really hard to figure out what's on. But to get around |
|
135:26 | you do ratios of each of these against each other, and you can |
|
135:31 | up with some pretty good ideas of . And do you remember when, |
|
135:38 | uh, in last week I showed the Caspian Sea and I showed you |
|
135:41 | these rivers and sediment sources coming in the south southern part of the Caspian |
|
135:47 | , where the Axiron ridge was, the big oil fields where, |
|
135:52 | one of the ways that we were to distinguish which river systems sediments were |
|
135:55 | from was by the ratios of these three elements these radioactive elements. And |
|
136:04 | you use absolute numbers, there's a of things that, in other |
|
136:08 | you can have a lot of all these, Uh, and then in |
|
136:12 | Well, you have a few of of these, but when you look |
|
136:15 | the ratios from one to the It gives you a good idea of |
|
136:19 | the actual source Waas. So that's of how that log is used. |
|
136:25 | had a question about our cases. , I've never seen one that on |
|
136:34 | log, like just an example of our coast looks like on a gamma |
|
136:37 | log. But it isn't easy. fake out as reading Hot Gamma or |
|
136:44 | Arcos is really not read so hot you might mistake it. Oh, |
|
136:49 | , we're not actually looking. We're actually looking for a narcos. If |
|
136:56 | have felt empathic grains, uh, could create something that's more our Kosik |
|
137:05 | than court Sediq, you're gonna have higher signal of this. It's not |
|
137:11 | be You're not going to see a layer. And it's not going to |
|
137:14 | , uh, for the most it's not going to say this is |
|
137:17 | narcos or this is not a It's going to tell you that we're |
|
137:22 | a certain percentage relative to these other . In other words, uh, |
|
137:28 | of this signal is being replaced by signal or is being replaced by this |
|
137:32 | . And that's why the ratios In other words, what's the relative |
|
137:36 | of these things I'm getting, high gamma response or a low gamma |
|
137:40 | ? What's the ratio between between Whether I'm getting lower high and that |
|
137:45 | me whether it's Mawr are Cacic or our coast. Okay, so |
|
137:51 | oftentimes we'll have a really suppressed signal , and we'll know. It's pretty |
|
137:57 | that it's, Ah, straightforward solicit set of clay minerals. But |
|
138:04 | if we have something where there's like like a the source, water |
|
138:11 | across, say, the desert to east of east of the Caspian |
|
138:19 | You're going to see more of this in if you see sediments coming in |
|
138:25 | the Volga. That sometimes was also route of the ocean when sea level |
|
138:30 | how you're going to see more So it's a matter of kind of |
|
138:33 | this out. And if something is from the mountains in the West, |
|
138:37 | going to see a pickup. in the Arcos is So it |
|
138:44 | It's not an absolute thing, and not actually identifying, uh, a |
|
138:50 | sand or are Kostic sand or something got a lot of products that have |
|
138:56 | , uh, highly weather to where got these insoluble minerals that end up |
|
139:04 | there. But this would be the weather, the next most weather, |
|
139:08 | this is the least weather of the coming into your source. So it's |
|
139:12 | one way to define your sources of . And, uh, but having |
|
139:18 | all of that, when it's it's usually because of this. And |
|
139:23 | usually hot because of. And that's the total gamma, not the spectral |
|
139:30 | log. You normally see a hot when we have rich organic shales and |
|
139:36 | hot because the organ organic particles in shale are going to be absorbing the |
|
139:44 | minerals. Okay, does that make to you? And that's that's what |
|
139:49 | what we're looking for, most of looking for this. But if we're |
|
139:53 | to figure out the source of the , we do the spectral gamma |
|
139:58 | which which separates these three records. , we see one gamma log, |
|
140:04 | is the total, and it includes three. And so, if you |
|
140:10 | sorry, sorry. But if you logging, say you were logging through |
|
140:15 | series of Shales or mud stones in new log pass a bed. That's |
|
140:23 | are Kosik. Is it possible that would read high enough on a P |
|
140:27 | it to look very similar? Thio mud later. That's what I was |
|
140:33 | to say is if you log it will. The FBI counts behind |
|
140:38 | to where it looks like a I've never look, look, look |
|
140:42 | it for that purpose. But I tell you something that does happen. |
|
140:49 | , you know, one of the wanna let me let me flip over |
|
140:53 | to a gamma log? Typical gam . So what we're normally looking at |
|
140:58 | the total gamma. And so a of times we think of high as |
|
141:07 | in this direction, but it's low this direction is high in that |
|
141:11 | So the high, uh, radioactive . Total gamma response. Natural radiation |
|
141:19 | is over here. So this is , Hi. Spike here. This |
|
141:23 | a high spike here, okay? so you can see here that there's |
|
141:30 | a more marine shale in here in more Marine shale there. Okay, |
|
141:37 | , and then you get up in . You can't really the length ology |
|
141:41 | is kind of confusing, but when get up here, you have definite |
|
141:44 | stones and you have definite Shales. here you have a lot of |
|
141:49 | Looks like a lot of shale and of its slow. But then it's |
|
141:53 | . So these air probably organic, from marine shells right here, that |
|
141:58 | of thing. And, uh, most of time, though, what |
|
142:03 | we use in that gamma log What is the predominant reason we do |
|
142:07 | gamble and that goes back to Yeah, it goes back to this |
|
142:17 | . Well, I thought I had . No, it goes back to |
|
142:26 | and mythology and the main purpose of . Oh, here it is. |
|
142:34 | huh. I knew it was somewhere versus san. That's what we're usually |
|
142:39 | . You know, it's just a gamma log is mud versus scene spectral |
|
142:44 | log. Uh, looks at the spectrum of the three primary elements that |
|
142:51 | going to look at that produced that signal, and when you work with |
|
142:58 | , sometimes you can figure out the . But you really have to be |
|
143:01 | and know what you're doing okay. my my little page shifter on my |
|
143:14 | works, and sometimes it doesn't. , so let me let me give |
|
143:21 | an example of kind of what you're about, but it's different than what |
|
143:24 | talking about. For example, here have. We have Sands, |
|
143:30 | These air low gamma. And then have these shales over here, and |
|
143:34 | can really see him. And the sharp spikes. Here's one over |
|
143:40 | The Nance information. You see, a shale. So this is a |
|
143:44 | shale. We got a spike You can go along and you can |
|
143:48 | that the whole curves come down in for the shale. It goes up |
|
143:52 | the sandstone comes down for the the , and there it goes up for |
|
143:56 | sand stones. Here's a shale, it's over here. Okay, So |
|
144:02 | would happen? Uh, something I told you about the East Coast is |
|
144:09 | , um the bath A list There a significant amount of uranium in |
|
144:15 | and they're actually considered when you look the sap. Prolific deposits from the |
|
144:21 | lists. Uh, when the price uranium is high, they become |
|
144:27 | But that's really not as important as is that there's a lot of source |
|
144:34 | , uh, radioactive sand size particles in to the Atlantic Ocean down the |
|
144:43 | that drain the Appalachians and all the down to Georgia and probably some parts |
|
144:50 | and Alabama. And so when you through a relatively uranium rich sandstone, |
|
145:01 | gonna you're gonna get a reversal of spike. In other words, the |
|
145:04 | is gonna be higher than the probably because it has a lot of |
|
145:09 | uranium and other radioactive minerals in it sand size particles. And we call |
|
145:15 | hot sands and hot sands. if they're hot enough often can be |
|
145:22 | grade sources of uranium. Uh, that they did during World War Two |
|
145:28 | mind a lot of that stuff because were trying to get uranium from anywhere |
|
145:31 | could at the time. E don't anybody is mining that right now, |
|
145:39 | one of the environmental things about that that it does mean a lot of |
|
145:43 | sediments that roll down off the Appalachian are also carrying with them a lot |
|
145:50 | naturally radioactive minerals and So you have worry about of, you know, |
|
145:57 | , um, radioactive vapors in your or you're not your attic, but |
|
146:03 | across space or a basement. You to watch out for that kind of |
|
146:07 | . But normally a basement, it's have thick enough concrete or something that |
|
146:11 | don't have to worry about it. there are places where basement is partly |
|
146:15 | rock, and it's not covered in . So, yes, you can |
|
146:22 | if these things reverse for some You know, normally, when we |
|
146:27 | a lot of uranium, it's this thing, and it's going to be |
|
146:30 | . Grain and the sands, they're be clean as a whistle in the |
|
146:34 | of Mexico. You know, they're to be highly, uh ah, |
|
146:41 | Citic. They're gonna have very little any of this very little of any |
|
146:43 | that. They're gonna have this in Carolina, the office for South |
|
146:47 | Virginia, Maryland, parts of You're going to see maybe a higher |
|
146:54 | of this than you normally would uh, in the Gulf of Mexico |
|
146:59 | and they do have places where there's night deposits, so you could see |
|
147:04 | of this in in it, at a higher level. But having |
|
147:08 | that again, you still would be to distinguish by ratios what's really going |
|
147:14 | from from, say, one river another river. If you have multiple |
|
147:21 | systems providing the source of the sentiments on God, would you say |
|
147:29 | Would you say that the Gulf of is is an easy basin? |
|
147:34 | yeah, the Gulf of Mexico in . But see, that's that's why |
|
147:39 | of what I'm gonna be showing you most of this lecture is nothing other |
|
147:48 | where most of the information is coming and what it means. But there's |
|
147:53 | to everything in a logging tool uh, you know, we're talking |
|
147:58 | certain minerals, and some of them even exist in some places. And |
|
148:03 | also, uh, when we start talking about the SP log, |
|
148:10 | um there's also funny things that happened SP logs, depending on where you're |
|
148:15 | but in the Gulf of Mexico, a simpler system where you have a |
|
148:19 | of pure courts and a lot of clays or organic rich and and also |
|
148:26 | with with seismic to a lot of was developed with regard to the types |
|
148:32 | responses we would see in the Gulf Mexico. And then it gets applied |
|
148:35 | else. But the you guys know the the A p I gamma log |
|
148:44 | site is for the whole world No, it's, uh the original |
|
148:50 | is on the campus of the University Houston. Of course, now we're |
|
148:57 | enough thio to calibrate things by making calibrate er's. But there was a |
|
149:03 | of rock underneath the art and X over there off of Calhoun Road. |
|
149:09 | think they moved the roads around over , so I don't know exactly. |
|
149:12 | it's close. Thio, uh, to the Greek houses over there, |
|
149:19 | , if they're still standing and, , pretty wild over there on the |
|
149:25 | the sororities. And how do they the guys things? Excuse me. |
|
149:35 | . Yes, fraternities. They don't so fraternal to me. Sometimes have |
|
149:40 | hard time remembering that term. But anyway, uh, of over |
|
149:46 | there's like some flat concrete. There's holes in the ground, and people |
|
149:50 | to stick their logs down there and A over there in the research center |
|
149:56 | built some things to kind of mimic . But I think back when I |
|
150:01 | actually doing offshore Gulf of Mexico, would drive their trucks to the University |
|
150:05 | Houston, drop their tools down in and calibrated they might bring, |
|
150:09 | 40 40 tools of the time and a whole bunch of them at once |
|
150:13 | drive back to slumbers a down on 45 and or maybe one of the |
|
150:18 | roads. So and that might be reason why it was there. There |
|
150:22 | some land there and maybe slumbers a . The holes initially, I don't |
|
150:28 | the whole history of it, But air still on campus and there may |
|
150:33 | may be ah, little plaque or there Now, uh, but if |
|
150:38 | on campus, I could walk you there at lunchtime. So anyway, |
|
150:44 | , here is just the regular spectral log, and here's the suite of |
|
150:50 | minerals. And of course, these are parts per million. And this |
|
150:53 | , uh, potassium is a percentage another number, and, uh, |
|
150:59 | you have to do ratios toe actually a handle on it. And, |
|
151:03 | course, the range in some of things is important, too. And |
|
151:06 | you can see the big Marine We've got a nice uranium spike. |
|
151:11 | , that's that's the big spike that seeing. Not that these aren't having |
|
151:16 | in the shale, and these aren't anything in the shell. The big |
|
151:19 | there is that uranium input of for big marine Spike. And you can |
|
151:24 | here when you get into Sands and not hot sands, everything cools |
|
151:29 | Ah, but one of the One of a key thing to |
|
151:32 | And I and I don't know of tools. Do it or not, |
|
151:36 | don't think they do, because students seem Thio understand this. But when |
|
151:40 | get an inflection like this in the , that means you've got some shale |
|
151:45 | in here. And, uh, have shale stringers in your sandstone. |
|
151:50 | gonna be including porosity effective porosity, is, You know, the shells |
|
151:57 | be high process. The probability is love. And so when you do |
|
152:01 | quick and dirty log analysis, you want to pull out a foot. |
|
152:06 | , This is in meters, so might want to pull out a couple |
|
152:09 | centimeters or several centimeters. Um or would it be? Maybe about 36 |
|
152:17 | , Um, somewhere between 20 24 centimeters. Uh, every time you |
|
152:25 | inflection like this. So this I don't know, maybe 15 ft |
|
152:31 | . This little thing right here, might want to remove 2 ft because |
|
152:35 | those Stringer's. And if this wasn't , you could see another stringer in |
|
152:39 | that's a little bit bigger. And goes to a little bit of a |
|
152:42 | in the forum there. So something happened to the sand in there. |
|
152:49 | it's too bad this is covering it . Let me see in a move |
|
152:55 | just to make sure I'm not lying Yes, something's going on there. |
|
153:02 | it's a sand. That's ah, change in the sandstone, but not |
|
153:14 | . You're not seeing this thorium Thio story, um, popped |
|
153:19 | That's a compositional change in the And here is this right here |
|
153:25 | uh, is gonna be like little stringers. Organic rich sandstone. Excuse |
|
153:31 | . Shells. Little tiny stringers mixed there So you'd want to try to |
|
153:36 | that out and we'll go back to and it's been a little bit |
|
153:46 | It's been about an hour and almost minutes. So I'm gonna take a |
|
153:54 | for everybody, cause I'm getting tired we'll come back and look at |
|
153:58 | And mawr, I really appreciate people asking questions, by the way, |
|
154:05 | , um, anyway, take a and let's do about it. How |
|
154:10 | a 12 minute break? Come back five till something like that sounds |
|
154:18 | And then then we won't have to another break until the end. |
|
155:16 | Okay. Can everybody hear me? . Yep. Okay. Okay. |
|
155:31 | we were We were there. Um, so just to summarize, |
|
155:38 | had a lot of discussions, but . Done. You gotta present. |
|
155:46 | . Okay. I did. But guess it went away. Let me |
|
155:50 | . Or maybe I just can't take guys it. No, I got |
|
155:56 | . It's okay. I believe Stuff happens with these things. E |
|
156:03 | Dr Basada when we were in his that he needed to get a recliner |
|
156:08 | teach class and and just have the camera set ups where he could just |
|
156:12 | in the recliner and give his So if he's more comfortable because he |
|
156:14 | like, he's always saying that his was hurting, sitting in the chair |
|
156:17 | day long. His knees. his knees. That's what it |
|
156:22 | Yeah, well, my knees used bother me, but not from |
|
156:26 | But since Kobe 19, I've almost 2000 miles on my bike, and |
|
156:35 | built up my muscles. And so knees don't bother me at all |
|
156:40 | So I've been lucky. Okay. wanna go Thio. Now you can |
|
156:48 | me and everything else, right? . Look good. Good, |
|
156:52 | Okay, so? So the main , uh, for plus, Audrey |
|
156:59 | a little bit older than I It's a It's pretty amazing what kind |
|
157:04 | shape? He's in the considering. I've been lucky to myself, I |
|
157:10 | . But anyway, um, that main issue for the gamma log, |
|
157:17 | course it za roc tool, and it's mainly used for discriminate discriminating between |
|
157:23 | and Shales. And, uh, course, the Gulf of Mexico works |
|
157:29 | because we have lots of sand and intervals. You guys somewhere else where |
|
157:34 | lots of carbonates, it still but But the story gets a little |
|
157:40 | , and you have to use additional . Decide what what it all |
|
157:45 | Like the resistive iti, which is fluid tool. Okay, eso rock |
|
157:52 | continued spontaneous potential that also a sand discrimination. Um, one of one |
|
158:01 | the fellas a few years ago that our petro physics classes. Ah, |
|
158:08 | to know why I explain anything about logs. And for those of you |
|
158:13 | are working or might have recently been , did you ever come across an |
|
158:18 | log in your data set? And one of the reasons for that |
|
158:24 | is that, uh, take a . Ah, like the Permian |
|
158:32 | And you've drilled all these conventional wells the past, and they all have |
|
158:37 | logs and you want to figure out going on regionally? And this this |
|
158:41 | happens all over the state of Oklahoma. You name it. Um |
|
158:49 | , If you're gonna use legacy you need to understand what S P |
|
158:52 | is. And you also have to that it's it's close to what a |
|
158:56 | log tool tells you, but it's identical. And there are things that |
|
159:00 | you that a gamma log doesn't tell . But by and large they're pretty |
|
159:05 | in their responses. They're very but under different variables. For |
|
159:13 | oil has an impact on SP, solemnity has a and not only solidity |
|
159:21 | but slowly has a big impact on Wouldn't bother a gamma log at all |
|
159:27 | the formation water, but also the of the formation. Water can be |
|
159:35 | whenever we're We're looking at S P in places like Argentina San Harney |
|
159:42 | It's an alkaline enriched basin one of basins that had high algal productivity and |
|
159:50 | a lot of oil and gas because was alkaline enriched. Um, I |
|
159:56 | working on that basis to figure out there was so much oil there. |
|
159:59 | of course I kind of knew ahead time because it was outlined, |
|
160:04 | and one of the logging guys. just how comes we get all these |
|
160:07 | up responses on our logs here, I said, because the alkalinity Israel |
|
160:11 | in your water and it's just like going to fresh water but you didn't |
|
160:14 | it. And, uh and it's fresh water because it's sailing, but |
|
160:18 | za different composition of saline water. , uh and so you get a |
|
160:23 | response for that, too. so anyway, it's It's a good |
|
160:29 | shell discriminator to and again, it primarily developed in the Gulf of Mexico |
|
160:34 | industrial use. Sure. And here have, uh ah, log that |
|
160:40 | like some of the logs you're gonna to correlate and notice how subtle some |
|
160:47 | these could be. You know, doesn't look like like this, where |
|
160:53 | have a sand popping way out here a shell going way back there really |
|
161:00 | response, and it's also the capture is slower, so it has a |
|
161:09 | bed effect. Thinner beds could be , and course it's good. Shale |
|
161:17 | impact it, and so you could that's depressed. Uh, here's a |
|
161:26 | that's a thin bed because the tool respond as quickly. Um, you |
|
161:33 | a suppressed spike going in the negative , and but, you know, |
|
161:44 | then you look at the whole log you try to figure out what the |
|
161:46 | peaks are. and that we've decided static. ESPN, of course, |
|
161:51 | picking it off your cleanest sand Not not your smaller bedded sandstone. |
|
161:57 | a clean sandstone, but it's a bed. It gets smaller and look |
|
162:00 | that. It's suppressed this one smaller that one, too, so it's |
|
162:04 | little suppressed. So we developed a of scaling this between this static SP |
|
162:14 | what we call the shale line, is where it just bases out. |
|
162:16 | when it gets down here, we it's shale, and we don't have |
|
162:22 | amazing spikes that you see in the log for a good marine, organic |
|
162:26 | show. And that's kind of how tool works. And again because, |
|
162:37 | , you're trying to pick up information the currents flowing between the shells and |
|
162:43 | sands. It's zits more complicated than . In reality, even even the |
|
162:50 | of Ah Adam is but But the principle is is that you have something |
|
162:57 | as a membrane and ah, with cat eines or smaller in the chlorine |
|
163:04 | ions, so there's a higher propensity the sodium to come through. It's |
|
163:10 | that the chlorine doesn't get through but it's more cat ions and an |
|
163:15 | , and here it's on over abundance ins, or they flatten it |
|
163:20 | And so you can see, just in terms of the relative |
|
163:28 | E don't know where I pulled this , but it always bothered me that |
|
163:34 | was smaller than, um, Because I know as a full molecule |
|
163:42 | mean a fuel. A few a Adam of chlorine could just because the |
|
163:54 | weight would likely be a little bit . But it isn't because of the |
|
163:59 | electrons. But the, uh you here the the sodium cat ion is |
|
164:08 | and the chlorine an iron is and this is much bigger in terms |
|
164:16 | space than this is. And so why apparently it's It's not like a |
|
164:24 | that works perfectly, but it just , ah, propensity for, |
|
164:30 | the smaller cat ions to get through and the larger and ions to get |
|
164:35 | down here. And, of we're working in a sodium, chlorine |
|
164:40 | system. If you change it to that sodium bicarbonate id sodium bicarbonate |
|
164:47 | it's gonna be different responses, and not going to go into details of |
|
164:51 | because that's really specialized problems that pop in only certain places. Okay, |
|
165:01 | and here I just pointed out Alkalinity a similar effect. But here is |
|
165:06 | is the slinging. The mud is greater in the Solyndra. The formation |
|
165:10 | fresh and have been in a class somebody's gone. How could it be |
|
165:19 | ? The water is always salty in subsurface, and everybody in here knows |
|
165:24 | not true, right? No Yeah, no. Yeah, that's |
|
165:35 | we That's why we have aquifers. we can get water out of a |
|
165:40 | that's low salinity and fresh. A of times it's like those diagrams that |
|
165:48 | he disappears with death. It but it doesn't always disappear. It |
|
165:52 | same rate, like those diagrams show . And there are things that |
|
165:57 | uh, enhanced ferocity that have nothing do with depth of burial. But |
|
166:04 | the same thing here, uh, general, and that is absolutely |
|
166:10 | In general, as we go deeper the street, in the in the |
|
166:16 | , we're going to get more and saline water if you happen to pass |
|
166:21 | assault wing close by. You're gonna a spike in solidity And then when |
|
166:26 | get past, it may drop back again. Likewise, if you have |
|
166:31 | , big title bore, uh, your coastline. Uh, the weight |
|
166:39 | all that water is going to push in land and deeper into the rock |
|
166:44 | . Uh, certainly not much greater a few 1000 ft, but you're |
|
166:49 | have mawr freshwater, uh, getting into the upper ends of, |
|
166:54 | stream that's held back by tied, , fresh water is going to be |
|
166:59 | down. There will be an interface it's all sailing, but at the |
|
167:03 | time, there's places up to it air getting a higher rate of of |
|
167:09 | of fresh water. Ah, at , um, locations. And of |
|
167:15 | , if you go up dip, may see that pushing the water fresh |
|
167:19 | into the formation deeper in this section you go up dip on a coastal |
|
167:25 | , so that happens a lot you have in South Carolina. They didn't |
|
167:30 | any oil wells. So when I , subsurface work in South Carolina had |
|
167:33 | work with, um with fresh Well, basically water Wells and there |
|
167:39 | no There's no oil wells. She get any data on that. So |
|
167:43 | did a lot of work with water . Water wells, uh, are |
|
167:49 | after fresh water and say your gamma could be completely reversed in the entire |
|
167:56 | . It wasn't always so that's what Click her to it. And as |
|
168:00 | got closer, you had, impact of saline water coming in from |
|
168:06 | coming up and down and little bit that there was a backup of the |
|
168:12 | water that was trying to move down . And you would see a little |
|
168:16 | more freshwater in those aquifers because actual cycles, uh, near the shoreline |
|
168:23 | , uh, maybe not be in wedge of salt coming in through the |
|
168:29 | . But it would be backed up a while so it would fluctuate weather |
|
168:32 | in the in the those particular even if it was still fresh, |
|
168:35 | fluctuate from from the effects of tide were farther down. Dip on. |
|
168:41 | wasn't quite Selena. Okay, that's little bit off target, but here |
|
168:45 | go. Here is normal SP responses we see and here we got the |
|
168:52 | . A shell. This is not anything about bed effect. This is |
|
168:59 | sort of generalizing what you're supposed to . Shell. It goes down |
|
169:04 | uh, it moves in this positive . Uh, and because you have |
|
169:11 | heavy load on the and ions and you have the Catalan so goes |
|
169:16 | And so that's the way it looks . And, uh, here's, |
|
169:24 | , intermediate depths. And this, frankly, could be, um, |
|
169:32 | about 5000 ft that has a lot freshwater and saltwater mixed together. And |
|
169:37 | you get kind of ah, who what it iss if you have. |
|
169:42 | you have hydrocarbons in the poor it would suppress the SP, |
|
169:47 | Yes, it does. If you a normal SP response. Yeah, |
|
169:50 | wouldn't it wouldn't impact a gamma but it would impact this. So |
|
169:54 | one of the neat things about having running a gamma e don't know why |
|
170:00 | They didn't like us to run them . I don't know what it was |
|
170:02 | . The tools that aggravated one Maybe maybe they didn't like it being |
|
170:08 | String of tools. But we always would run both of them because, |
|
170:15 | know, the gamma log was great doing the sand shale thing. But |
|
170:19 | of that s p got suppressed, know, without even looking at the |
|
170:23 | activity. You had an idea of the where the hydrocarbons might have |
|
170:28 | And of course, it's primarily an impact. Okay, And you're going |
|
170:34 | see that in the exercise that you in this class, there's gonna be |
|
170:39 | suppression due to oil. Okay. this is just two logs together comparing |
|
170:46 | SP Here's the Gamma. Here's the . What's most notable? That's not |
|
170:53 | actually relates to the question the statement just made. It's like it's suppressed |
|
171:00 | there. Yeah, automatically. For that don't know, Um, here's |
|
171:06 | perf interval and there's a perf Normally, they perf things when there's |
|
171:11 | there's oil and gas in it, in this case it's probably oil. |
|
171:19 | if you come over here, you see you know you've gone to a |
|
171:24 | or the string. That's kind of the oils included. The SP doesn't |
|
171:29 | is fast, but you can see a suppression, uh, there to |
|
171:34 | shale. But here you're in clean sand and look what happens. |
|
171:41 | it a long time for it to back up to what would be static |
|
171:48 | . Okay. And you know, it even reaches static SP in this |
|
171:54 | . It would be right here, it's probably static. SP is probably |
|
171:58 | than that because you've got oil in whole thing here we have. You |
|
172:02 | , our cleanest sand is up Look at that. Here's oil |
|
172:07 | Maybe a little bit of shale suppression there. You know, there's little |
|
172:12 | on a gamut Tell you something. when when I worked at a |
|
172:18 | um, early on in my Thanks. Um, one thing I'm |
|
172:25 | at is, uh, I hate , but I follow them. |
|
172:29 | uh, sometimes people that hate rules them closer than people that live by |
|
172:36 | . But, um, I had big pay sands that looked like |
|
172:42 | And when the expiration geologists had the , they made a whole bunch of |
|
172:47 | that people kept copying and they called pace section. This whole internal, |
|
172:53 | whole thing, they were calling effective . And of course, I paid |
|
172:59 | in my my 3.5 logging courses. , uh, I think in my |
|
173:07 | career, one of the smartest things ever did was I asked questions every |
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173:10 | chance I got. And I was afraid to ask a question. And |
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173:16 | so I got a lot of information this and what you do, all |
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173:21 | inflections you're gonna pull out a little of of Interval for that, This |
|
173:25 | a lot mawr for this one. lot more. But you know, |
|
173:28 | gonna have some. You're gonna have effective process in here. But you |
|
173:31 | all this little wiggly stuff. They a long story short. I went |
|
173:36 | South Marsh Island 1 28 about 60 , and they might have had, |
|
173:42 | , 300. There were multiple They might have had 3 to 400 |
|
173:47 | of pay section in each Well, on average, I knocked that down |
|
173:52 | from 400 to 300 from probably 50 2 to 75 to 50. |
|
174:00 | I knocked it down on average, ft of pay. And so the |
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174:05 | in the field this was the biggest , single producing, three square mile |
|
174:11 | in the Gulf of Mexico. And reduced the pay in there, |
|
174:17 | by a good 2025% and it got . Uh, and I know you |
|
174:26 | probably know this happens is a minute do something is a geologist to kind |
|
174:29 | hits the bottom line, but make long story another long story short, |
|
174:33 | reduced the reserves of this field by significant amount from about 125 million barrels |
|
174:40 | 75 million barrels in the A couple things happened. First, the vice |
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174:47 | of Exploration Exploration when they didn't have lot of executive vice presidents, by |
|
174:51 | way, he was the number two . He flew down from New York |
|
174:57 | to Houston, asked me what I wrong, and I thought that was |
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175:01 | only thing that was gonna happen. , of course, uh, as |
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175:05 | new geologist, I went and got our lead. Petro physically came in |
|
175:09 | told the guy I did everything exactly . And that's exactly what the facts |
|
175:14 | . And so I thought, God, this is terrible, but |
|
175:18 | , But then the federal government realized changed our reserves, we lowered our |
|
175:24 | and the first thing they decided. know how conspiracy theories work on both |
|
175:28 | . First thing they decided that since reduced the amount of reserves we had |
|
175:33 | this field prior to a certain point if you found new oil, you |
|
175:38 | get a better price for it. if you get rid of some of |
|
175:41 | reserves and then you bring them you could get a higher price on |
|
175:44 | oil. So somebody automatically decided that was intentionally trying to hide reserves so |
|
175:51 | they could call them new reserves. we got audited, and I still |
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175:58 | lost my job yet. And, so they got DeGolyer and MacNaughton to |
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176:05 | in tow, audit my reserves. when they got done, they took |
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176:11 | mawr reserves and back then and only rare cases with a vice president talked |
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176:18 | a frontline geologist, and they didn't this case. But they called up |
|
176:24 | boss's boss's boss and he related to his reports and then that guy. |
|
176:31 | it got to my boss. He in, and the vice president pointed |
|
176:36 | . Thank goodness you guys air not , but you're optimistic. So, |
|
176:42 | , I dodged that ball, that . So as it turns out, |
|
176:47 | I went in and was carefully picking effective porosity, I was being less |
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176:54 | than the auditors who were paid by . Thio be very conservative on what |
|
176:59 | pay is, and I don't Some companies probably have protocols now where |
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177:05 | only go by, uh, computer , effective porosity. But I know |
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177:12 | computer generated effective porosity that compares a of different logs to figure out what |
|
177:17 | effective process. It's often off quite bit, uh, not not because |
|
177:23 | tools don't work, but because tools always know what all the variables are |
|
177:28 | a given. Well and oftentimes, underlying assumption is it's exactly what we're |
|
177:34 | in the Gulf of Mexico. If go outside of the Gulf of |
|
177:38 | you get a whole different type of that air in there literally hundreds of |
|
177:44 | that can affect tool responses, and focusing on the main ones that affect |
|
177:49 | response. And so artificial intelligence or log analysis based on a global database |
|
177:58 | gonna be looking at an average It's expected for a certain set of |
|
178:03 | , and those conditions might not totally in the well that you drill. |
|
178:07 | you have to be. It's often to be able to look at a |
|
178:10 | and try toe get in idea of computer print out, which is 90% |
|
178:15 | the time going to be right. sometimes it's wrong. The mob in |
|
178:20 | Bay, the first guest to stuff thereby by mobile was actually done by |
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178:26 | an older hand. I could see one of the tools was being affected |
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178:33 | just tight, tight sands. And wasn't a lack of gas. And |
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178:40 | , uh, he put his career the line esten to run a test |
|
178:45 | Mobile Bay. That whole area turned to be a huge gas fields all |
|
178:50 | the place that just opened it Okay, so next thing that we |
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178:57 | at his resistive ity logs and the data, uh, suite of logs |
|
179:02 | , we're not gonna look at We don't have time for this |
|
179:04 | but I kind of have to go this because I'm gonna ask you to |
|
179:08 | be able to look at the log figure out what the pay is in |
|
179:12 | . And I used to do that with our correlation exercise. But it |
|
179:17 | too long, so that won't But whether I have an exercise or |
|
179:22 | , I think it's really important for to be able to look at a |
|
179:27 | and automatically think, you know, there's something wrong with this interpretation, |
|
179:32 | could it be? And a lot times we have, we end up |
|
179:36 | more more production than we think we reserves for or less production than we |
|
179:41 | we have reserves for sometimes it's very to go back and look at the |
|
179:46 | and see, Is there something that possibly be throwing this off? And |
|
179:50 | more you know about how to look ah, basic log sweets and figure |
|
179:56 | what they really mean, particularly in area that you're in, every area |
|
180:01 | gonna have little different perturbations if I'm in in Ah, uh, say |
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180:08 | Denver area, I would have Thio they're looking at a completely different kinds |
|
180:13 | rocks, and I'm looking at in Gulf of Mexico and the same in |
|
180:16 | North Sea. Uh, if you've at all three of them, then |
|
180:20 | know there's lots of quirky things, you might go into an area with |
|
180:24 | quirky problem that they haven't even figured yet because they never saw it anywhere |
|
180:28 | . Everything looks quirky like that. they just think it's normal. And |
|
180:33 | , uh, again, being able look at the rial data is really |
|
180:37 | sometimes and not just taking an interpretation generated by, you know, really |
|
180:42 | developed algorithms, but they don't always at all the the variables that are |
|
180:49 | and not intentionally it just it happens . Okay, so we're gonna look |
|
180:54 | risk uses Tiv ity logs, uh, they're they're really fluid tools |
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181:03 | they're based on ah conductivity. Or resisted bitty Based on what? What |
|
181:11 | You know, all rocks have water them, especially I shouldn't say all |
|
181:18 | , but well, while rocks do some water and very little for igneous |
|
181:21 | metamorphic. But for sentimentally rocks, usually have quite a bit of |
|
181:26 | whether it's sand or shit and in , water is conducted And so the |
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181:35 | , Uh, what do you have there? The less salt water you |
|
181:38 | in there, the less conductive it's to be. And consequently, |
|
181:46 | and it turns out it's important that that conductivity is related to and effective |
|
181:56 | to, because for the current to , it's got, it's got to |
|
181:59 | around all these things. And so though shells might be porous and have |
|
182:08 | significant amount of water, the the permeability in that is going to be |
|
182:14 | lower. And so the conductivity of of the of that rock as a |
|
182:20 | is going to be lower and the it is going to be higher. |
|
182:28 | , And of course, oil and are not conducive either. So that's |
|
182:31 | , that's a really telling thing. why is this important? Well, |
|
182:37 | we we look, when we're doing is we're looking at predominantly sand |
|
182:47 | and if we just have a refer, it's gonna be, in |
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182:51 | words, it's gonna be a water , a wet sand. We, |
|
182:57 | , we would have a lot of water in that sand. Effective |
|
183:00 | We're gonna have a lot of But if you put oil and gas |
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183:04 | there that includes the water volume, going to reduce the conductivity of the |
|
183:09 | rock, and you're going to see drop in the, uh, connectivity |
|
183:16 | an increase in the resistance when you oil and gas in there. So |
|
183:19 | a really good thing, and gas a super notch up on resistive |
|
183:24 | Gas includes a lot of a lot other liquids, like oil in and |
|
183:32 | more of the water, and therefore reason activity is going to be dramatically |
|
183:39 | . It okay, and also formation is not conducive. So if we |
|
183:47 | run it, if we have a that probes into whole rock, all |
|
183:52 | things were going to have an impact it. And here's something just says |
|
183:58 | Bynes Cat introduces, even though there be lots of bound and conducive |
|
184:03 | And but but also Ah, uh, it's kind of the whole |
|
184:09 | , even though it's looking at the rock because the current is reduced by |
|
184:15 | . That's one of the main reasons , uh, this is gonna look |
|
184:21 | low conductivity. High reasons to the though there's a lot of bound |
|
184:27 | Okay, here is just looking at three different types. The normal, |
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184:32 | lateral log, Um, en dual log. And here's shown you an |
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184:38 | log. Uh, and going from , the spacing controlled the how deep |
|
184:49 | would penetrate here. Ah, we electrodes. That air kind of |
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184:58 | Ah, the current into a lateral . And of course, the more |
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185:05 | that goes into it, the more it is. The less current that |
|
185:09 | into it, the more resistant it . So the more you can focus |
|
185:14 | this this thing and get it farther . Um, you know, this |
|
185:19 | help with bed resolution a lot, you could also go a little bit |
|
185:24 | . This, of course, the you stretch this out, you |
|
185:28 | the loop has to go farther but then it gets a little bit |
|
185:32 | because you're going through too much And then, um, here you |
|
185:39 | something that, uh, sort of a ground loop in the rocks magnetic |
|
185:47 | , which forces the the, electric rays to go out farther and |
|
185:53 | so we could get deeper logs with type of configuration. And so this |
|
186:02 | focusing fields and the current heads out way. And here is kind of |
|
186:10 | going on with the you look a the induction field. Here's the |
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186:17 | log where you're trying to focus it go out into a certain thing like |
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186:24 | , uh, so you can get to go farther out in the spacing |
|
186:30 | change the spacing. And farther out go, the more the spacing is |
|
186:34 | that. And here you have one you haven't induced current and it just |
|
186:41 | a signal farther out and comes back . And that's how they work. |
|
186:46 | I know that's a riel cartoonish but that's the way they developed these |
|
186:52 | . And, of course, the logs, which can we pushed a |
|
186:56 | bit farther out in the induction are also some of the tools that |
|
187:02 | been developed Thio to reach out farther the section so that we can we |
|
187:08 | actually see a little bit ahead of drill bit. Um, see if |
|
187:15 | could quickly draw a picture for you on the side. That's my |
|
187:30 | Say I have um, gonna make simple change, My color. You |
|
187:57 | this first. So? So I Ah, see if I can draw |
|
188:22 | . Well, have a well coming like this. If, uh if |
|
188:36 | distance of my spread is limited or when I'm when I'm at this |
|
188:59 | you don't have to get this close the bed to see it. But |
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189:03 | my spread on my tool is like Sorry about that. I'm have to |
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189:14 | that one note to Don. Don't pictures again. So I had a |
|
189:36 | on my lateral longer induction log that farther out. Um, when my |
|
189:42 | bits about right here, I've already this formation way, way, way |
|
189:47 | here. Does everybody see that Yes. So, you know, |
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190:00 | I had a formation is like I would already have a good idea |
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190:05 | going on with a dip of Exactly. Let him way back here |
|
190:10 | the lives drill assemblies here, the behind its here. I'd be able |
|
190:15 | see this formation and probably the dip that formation and definitely the dip on |
|
190:19 | formation so I wouldn't have to wait it to get there. So with |
|
190:23 | with any kind of dip, Bond exaggerated this to make it easy to |
|
190:27 | . But even with a slight dip , the farther out you can |
|
190:33 | the easier it is to guide something a formation using geo steering. So |
|
190:39 | why that's important. Okay, so just some stuff on the resistive ity |
|
190:47 | SP logs together. Um, here's is permissible. Hi resistive ity full |
|
190:57 | oil, gas or fresh water. , so if you happen to hit |
|
191:03 | refer, it might not be but it's probably going to be under |
|
191:09 | ft and rule of thumb. Don't try to produce anything less than 5000 |
|
191:14 | deep because it can cause other problems don't want. And here is, |
|
191:23 | , the carbonate tight carbonate sandstone. it's showing a lot of reasons. |
|
191:30 | ity and, in fact, tight or tight sandstone. Uh, they |
|
191:42 | , um, usually peak really In other words, for resistive |
|
191:48 | the highest peaks you'll see are going be gas in tight, tight zone |
|
191:54 | carbonates in it. And in the of Mexico, you think of the |
|
191:59 | islands you've ever seen one before? on one like I have. They |
|
192:04 | these huge shell hash beds and a of the sand stones. Uh, |
|
192:09 | air barrier bars and offshore bars and shallow water will have a shell hash |
|
192:15 | the very top. And quite often looks like a really tight sand. |
|
192:20 | then the spike goes way over here this. Even if you have oil |
|
192:24 | there, uh, the oil is be like this, and then the |
|
192:27 | sand is going to be like And if and when you see that |
|
192:32 | know, it's a shell stringer that's on top of it like the Chandeleur |
|
192:37 | . But if you don't know you might think it's a gas |
|
192:41 | a little tiny gas cap. if you're gonna have a gas |
|
192:45 | unless you're doing another one of these wells, your guests oil contact, |
|
192:52 | know it's gonna be somewhere down You're going to see a big spike |
|
192:56 | , and then this is gonna be oil over here and then, |
|
192:59 | you come back into shell, uh and so that's I'm going to |
|
193:06 | you this again and I don't know I explain this 40 times, and |
|
193:11 | I give people a gas, a with gas in it, and people |
|
193:14 | even recognize that there's gas in Which is embarrassing for me that you |
|
193:20 | catch this point. But with the highest resisted, the spikes you're usually |
|
193:25 | to see are gonna be guests in sand or a tight carbonate lag deposit |
|
193:34 | top of a sand. Or if in a limestone, you could see |
|
193:36 | lot of it different setting. You're some ancient reefs and stuff. You'll |
|
193:42 | a lot of things that could be confusing, harder to interpret. And |
|
193:48 | , um, here's a formation, , uh, this is saturated with |
|
193:57 | . So the reasons tiv ity is low salt water. So the reason |
|
194:01 | is very low. So this is a, uh, saltwater equipment. |
|
194:08 | . And this is continuous show. always nice to know what continuous shale |
|
194:11 | like. Someone asked you to do with the shale section. Remember how |
|
194:16 | identify continuous shale. Okay. And here, um yes. This |
|
194:26 | stuff that can happen this different if have. You have fresh mud. |
|
194:33 | , where your mud is greater resisted than than the other in the formation |
|
194:41 | the water itself. In other it's this is fresh and that's |
|
194:46 | Then, um, you're going to this going on where your deep flog |
|
194:57 | gonna have a lower resistive ity in and your shall A log is gonna |
|
195:05 | , ah, higher resistive ity And that's because when the mud filled |
|
195:13 | he's going to get my is going get a lot of the shallow |
|
195:17 | The mud filled trade is going to higher resistive ity. Uh, then |
|
195:23 | formation. Okay, if you have things, come along here, you're |
|
195:33 | to see something that looks like that other words, might feel trading what |
|
195:38 | the same? You look like If the resistive ity of the formation |
|
195:44 | is greater in that, then you're to see the shallow log. This |
|
195:53 | this formation What it could be like because of, uh, they may |
|
195:57 | be water. It could be It be gas in the oil. So |
|
196:02 | the deep log is more resistive ity a shallow rock brought in this |
|
196:07 | it's gonna look like that even if water. If there's oil and gas |
|
196:11 | there, it's gonna be more And here's showing mud penetration with shallow |
|
196:22 | the formation. Um, and so getting that in the shallow log. |
|
196:31 | really high. And so it's like first one. But here we have |
|
196:37 | , oil, sandstone. Here's marine displaced by hydrocarbons. And here you |
|
196:44 | the deep, mud filled trait there's be high to. Actually, here |
|
196:52 | is, right here. The mud trade is going to be higher |
|
196:57 | uh, than this, because there's be saltwater down here and then that |
|
197:02 | affairs. And you got this cap here was basically telling you that there's |
|
197:07 | in this section and this will also , uh, the shallow because you've |
|
197:16 | that gas pushing on it, because see that so one of the things |
|
197:23 | we can see between deep and shallow whether we have a wet sand or |
|
197:30 | rich sand. This crossover point right tells us there's hydrocarbon enrich and the |
|
197:37 | is gonna be less of impact. me than the gas would be. |
|
197:42 | that's why the spike goes over Okay. This is, um, |
|
197:49 | log. Another diagram. They can a good test question. That's spelled |
|
197:56 | e s t test question. um, this is why distance and |
|
198:04 | is important. You know, you this mud filled borehole, and this |
|
198:09 | the formation here. This is a section. This is the formation. |
|
198:13 | we got this cross section halfway through hole. So that's why this curves |
|
198:17 | in there, because that's the other of the hole. But you're gonna |
|
198:21 | mud cake all around here, And depending on how far your mud |
|
198:31 | India here it's going toe. If fresh, water is going toe |
|
198:38 | Reduce your permeability. Well, that's not. It's, uh, |
|
198:45 | The difference between the Sliney here It's not going to reduce it because |
|
198:50 | the salt difference. But it will because the mud cake is coming in |
|
198:54 | because it's being the the marine natural waters are being displaced. Mind clay |
|
199:02 | from this. So you get this coming through here. The cake builds |
|
199:06 | here and it stops going in so . And here you have. |
|
199:10 | jagged line of of my infiltrate trying get through here. And there's a |
|
199:18 | zone where you may have a little of mud filled trait in here. |
|
199:24 | is where there's a lot of mud trait little bit of mud filled traders |
|
199:28 | . And here's true rock way out . So if I have a standard |
|
199:36 | huh, log and induction log and don't get out here, I may |
|
199:40 | see that response. You know, , if I have a ladder |
|
199:51 | right or back here Thean deduction Here's what Here's what I meant to |
|
199:59 | . I knew I was saying something . Okay, so we have normal |
|
200:03 | ity. We have the lateral and induction. If if I want to |
|
200:14 | out here in the formation, I'm have to have a ladder log or |
|
200:17 | induction tool from using normal resistive I may not be able to get |
|
200:22 | this transition zone or even even the tone, and this is called flush |
|
200:28 | this is gonna be from flush with lot of of the mud. So |
|
200:36 | is gonna be the forest space is to be filled with mud resisted ity |
|
200:40 | , you're gonna have some mud and rock reasons to be to rock reasons |
|
200:45 | and out here, you're gonna have invaded True rock. Jesus TV. |
|
200:50 | what you see here relates to what's the mud, and what you see |
|
200:55 | here is related to what is the rough? So what? We're trying |
|
201:00 | find his high resistive ity out which tells us that we have hydrocarbons |
|
201:07 | we're going to get some resistive iti go up in this mud flushes in |
|
201:12 | , so this ultimately should be But you can imagine if you're flooding |
|
201:18 | , it can cause problems. so here's, uh, something where |
|
201:25 | haven't had too much invasion. And looking at a shallow resistive ity and |
|
201:33 | deep resistive ity. And this curve a little bit better a little bit |
|
201:38 | illustrative of what this log is trying show you here with this overlap. |
|
201:46 | if if we have, um, ity here, that's greater than the |
|
201:58 | . Because you got the mud in . We're going to see shallow out |
|
202:08 | . But the true where the water because you've got more conductivity is over |
|
202:13 | . So this means there's saline and water. And when you cross this |
|
202:19 | , it means, you know, impact of the mud cake hasn't changed |
|
202:24 | all. But the resistive ity of gas and oil is a lot |
|
202:31 | Um, uh, Then what you over here where it was with and |
|
202:40 | the reason activity went up because of mud filter. So here you see |
|
202:44 | overlap. You're going from what are two productive center. And here's a |
|
202:51 | sandstone or limestone. But again, could be a sandstone with shells in |
|
202:56 | , and and I don't know but I had so many so many |
|
203:02 | in the Gulf of Mexico in some the Miocene sections and in Playa seen |
|
203:09 | that this would be sitting right on of here. And this this |
|
203:15 | like, way out to here with hash, uh, cementing up the |
|
203:22 | at the top of it. And , uh, then if you had |
|
203:26 | to gas would be out there. the gas would cycle. The gas |
|
203:30 | would be so great, it would . But usually this is greater than |
|
203:34 | oil by itself. And if you gas, uh, this is this |
|
203:40 | be way off the scale and would to cycle back on the scale. |
|
203:45 | , so that kind of tells you the hydrocarbons are. Okay, |
|
203:53 | this again shows you kind of the thing, and it's kind of hard |
|
203:56 | see, so I'm not gonna waste whole lot of time on it. |
|
204:01 | if you get in the UN invaded , uh, which is also called |
|
204:08 | here the un invaded zone To try remember these terms Flush transition and un |
|
204:15 | . Um, some people say all , no mud, some mud, |
|
204:22 | mud, But these it's not too to say on invaded transition and |
|
204:27 | So when I ask you that test , make sure you can get to |
|
204:31 | . And, uh, question s the are the deep always the lateral |
|
204:43 | waken do we can do now weaken waken do deep reasons Tiv ity with |
|
204:50 | other tools but that the deepest resisted They're gonna be the latter logs or |
|
204:57 | or the induction logs the normal the doesn't always go that far. |
|
205:02 | when you're dealing with sand and and you have nice saline marine |
|
205:06 | It's real simple. And it works well, even with even with, |
|
205:12 | , normal resistive ity. But when start getting the problems, it's good |
|
205:15 | have a good lateral log. They go out a little deeper. |
|
205:18 | if you're going through a shale, , trying to look for things, |
|
205:22 | a whole different ball game. So unconventional is this would this wouldn't be |
|
205:27 | the way to go. But uh, there's other other tools that |
|
205:31 | would have to try to pick up , uh, level of or |
|
205:37 | the gamma log, in some cases more useful. Okay, so here |
|
205:44 | just a example. Did I answer question well enough? Yes. Thank |
|
205:49 | very much. Okay. Um here just showing you an example of |
|
205:59 | Here we go. Back here. see, this is a deep resistive |
|
206:03 | that goes out of there first. , it's something that you see. |
|
206:09 | the deep resistive it. Ian And, uh, here. We've |
|
206:15 | the shallow resistive ity going out So you you've had a combination of |
|
206:24 | mixing really heavy in the in the and so And you've got hydrocarbons there |
|
206:29 | . So it's the It's the shallow in the hydrocarbon. So your separation |
|
206:33 | is a little bit different. Then see in this one. Okay, |
|
206:40 | , because this kind of we're looking the shallow, it's all nice and |
|
206:45 | . But here we've got lot of , and it's flying kind of flying |
|
206:54 | the handle. And you also have SP log here that's telling you there's |
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206:58 | in there. And so Ah, with the here, it's using fresh |
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207:06 | . So, uh, that's also reason why this one's a little bit |
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207:10 | than the other one. So you're slightly different overlap, but you can |
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207:14 | , um, you can see a . Uh, basically, um, |
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207:21 | Here's probably where it might be because here's, uh, you |
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207:26 | you've got this thing, so it be went all the way to |
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207:28 | and then you get this separation in , even though it seems reverse |
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207:33 | Whenever you get these really high spikes resistive ity, it's usually a very |
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207:38 | indicator that you're getting hydrocarbons, and something to do with the mud and |
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207:43 | deep the mud cake is and how how deep your tools are here, |
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207:50 | , that have something to do with the actual overlap looks like. But |
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207:57 | rule of thumb of really goes back , I guess, would be. |
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208:07 | one was It was one here. guess it's this one good rule of |
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208:16 | is when things start flying across the and resistive ity, there's probably going |
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208:20 | be hydrocarbons, and it might take a while to figure out, |
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208:25 | with the you know, you need look and see what you're resistive. |
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208:29 | is on the on the mud, you need thio. Get an idea |
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208:35 | how deep this zone might be going to your tool penetration, whether it's |
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208:41 | your your deep or shallow, have quick question. Sure, so on |
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208:49 | on that log that we're looking at there, imagine that you didn't have |
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208:53 | gamma curve. You were just looking the Espy and the resistive ity. |
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208:57 | would you? How could you say some certainty that that the top of |
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209:01 | bed is not just finding upwards and that redistribute responses tight at the |
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209:11 | Uh, well, one really easy . Is there separation here and |
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209:16 | Any direction tells you there's ferocity. , because there's Ah, because there's |
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209:23 | conflict between the deep and the shallow tells you there's either an invasion |
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209:29 | uh, in into a mud or invasion of hydrocarbon the other way |
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209:36 | And, uh, because some of formations air pressure, you know it's |
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209:40 | pressured or slightly pressured, and you get some on. What I'm trying |
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209:47 | say is you may get hydrocarbons going way, Okay? And then, |
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209:56 | but just looking at this, this like a good sand. And we |
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210:01 | this. And over here is good . And over here is good |
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210:07 | And when I come down here, resistive it doesn't look like good |
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210:11 | does it? This resistive ity over does not look like that shale. |
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210:16 | doesn't look like that shale up It doesn't look like the shale down |
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210:22 | at all. Lot of strange stuff going off. This is the trouble |
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210:29 | textbooks. She always gets the strangest . And But anyway, this |
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210:33 | uh I think you know, if drew your baseline, you'd probably figure |
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210:39 | this. Um, you know, baseline would probably somewhere around here these |
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210:44 | really silty sands. And then all a sudden, I've got this big |
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210:48 | here, but this resistive ity inflection is telling me there's a formation boundary |
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210:53 | with different fluids in it than up . So I have a formation boundary |
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210:59 | , and I have a formation boundary based on fluids and rock there. |
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211:04 | so I would know right away that is probably all sand and this |
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211:10 | fluid and rock resistive ity contrast to section in this section below it strongly |
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211:18 | that this is a very forced And of course, the separation was |
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211:23 | us there's ferocity. Enough ferocity make going. Both directions and invasion might |
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211:29 | deeper than one would expect, which have an impact. Okay, so |
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211:37 | getting near the end. So we're to the sonic and the density logs |
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211:42 | air fun logs to and of uh, do a lot of cross |
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211:48 | with these to do things and Really good. Uh, indicator of |
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211:58 | gas, of course, is a in these two tools. And, |
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212:05 | , what I find really interesting is kind of underscores what I talk about |
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212:12 | terms of the fact that under certain , these things work this way. |
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212:17 | changed the conditions. And, you , most of time when we look |
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212:21 | well, they all look the same , and we're working in the field |
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212:24 | almost all the wells in in a or work in the same way. |
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212:29 | you can get this density neutron uh, overlap. Uh, that |
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212:36 | signifies natural gas. Ah, with big signal. And it's because with |
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212:45 | gas in the formation, it creates error in the density log, and |
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212:51 | creates a different era in the neutron and the way that recorded they actually |
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212:58 | . And basically, with what you want to call to errors to opposing |
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213:06 | , the new neutron and density log tells you you have natural gas. |
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213:10 | it's pretty, pretty straightforward thing that can spot when you have these logs |
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213:16 | the sand and you have natural gas significant, and, uh, the |
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213:26 | bar for oil. The hydrocarbon int is a little bit different. It's |
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213:31 | as dramatic, so you can oftentimes if you have Ah, yes, |
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213:37 | . Oil contact. You can often the gas oil boundary on. Then |
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213:46 | can also see the water oil boundary that with these two tools. But |
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213:51 | talk about that in detail. tomorrow morning. And did you guys |
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213:56 | starting at 8. 45? It kind of nice. Uh huh. |
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214:02 | , we'll do that tomorrow, and see how far we get house. |
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214:09 | . Okay. Okay. Okay. here's another thing that's gonna happen tonight |
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214:15 | you guys go relaxing, I will to put together this, uh, |
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214:22 | for the capstone projects for those that it right now, because I meant |
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214:26 | do it last week. And uh, I'm also gonna be putting |
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214:29 | your correlation exercise and kind of, , made it a little bit easier |
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214:37 | time for you to correlate. have decided to many people have been |
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214:42 | trying to follow the rules to come with significant correlations, but, |
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214:48 | it's not gonna be easy, but will be easier than the way it's |
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214:52 | before, and we may or may get to it by the end of |
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214:57 | , but we'll definitely get through. logs will get through the Uh |
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215:05 | The process of correlation and things like and some of the other tools will |
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215:08 | through those pretty quickly. But there's a small exercise that's already been posted |
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215:14 | how toe to interpret. Two very logs. Uh, try to figure |
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215:20 | where the Hydra apartments are under some questions for that too. So, |
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215:25 | , I will, uh, try get the correlation exercise. Uh |
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215:35 | Digitized tonight. I had trouble. , my scanner stopped working at |
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215:41 | and but I got it fixed, so I'll get that will be that |
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215:45 | be posted online too. So I'll see you tomorrow at 8. |
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215:50 | . That's good. Thank you. night. Good night as mhm. |
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215:59 | I'm gonna stop the |
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