00:05 | Hey Stephanie, how you doing? , good, good. How was |
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00:10 | ? Starbucks coffee. It was delicious I needed it. Yeah, I've |
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00:16 | it I've got a cup here. a Starbucks coffee, but Homebrew, |
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00:24 | . The classic french roast. I my favorite homebrew is the, I |
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00:31 | the Htv Castella coffees. Oh, so good. Oh, which kind |
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00:36 | a TB? Yeah, it's the E B. They have their own |
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00:40 | of coffee. It's think it's casa and they are delicious. Uh you |
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00:51 | , almost any coffee is okay, I've grown accustomed to, the french |
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00:57 | pretty, it's pretty um distinctive or roasted. Some people might call it |
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01:04 | little better, but um that's kind the Starbucks taste I bet. |
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01:12 | the casa ole, they have a rose to its, I think my |
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01:15 | , my top three is the san , the french roast and then they |
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01:21 | a texas, pecan, those are my top three favorite ones. |
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01:25 | I'll have to try that. Maybe a chance to pick some up today |
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01:28 | tomorrow, highly recommend a good Hmm. Yeah, we went |
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01:36 | there's something in, in Colombia called , the, which is the, |
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01:45 | the coffee, the coffee route, can, you can go around and |
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01:50 | to all the plantations. Really you know, I don't know if |
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01:53 | like an avid coffee drinker, but christmas, a couple years ago I |
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01:58 | my sister a subscription. It's called coffee company. And every month they |
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02:05 | you a coffee from a different It would be like a nicaraguan |
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02:09 | a Colombian coffee african, whatever. and it's it was some of the |
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02:16 | coffee that we've ever had. Like was from Guatemala, from Mexico is |
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02:19 | Costa rica, it's everywhere. And month they send you a new |
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02:25 | That's a great idea. Mhm. . Nice, nice gift. I've |
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02:30 | some of them that are kind of , they're sort of care packages with |
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02:35 | of gourmet spreads and meats and stuff that, which are which are |
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02:42 | But I think the copy is a idea because you can store it maybe |
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02:46 | little bit better. And there's probably bad copy that they would send. |
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02:54 | know, I think our favorite was mexican. Like it was, it |
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02:57 | like this chocolate essence to it. it was just and then you get |
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03:01 | postcard with every country that they send , they send you like a postcard |
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03:06 | a postcard from like the village or that like harvested. Oh cool. |
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03:11 | that's another one of those fantasies would great to have a little coffee plantation |
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03:16 | with fruit trees and mango trees and good would that be? Yeah, |
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03:22 | mexican copy too, sometimes has cinnamon it, which I really like that |
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03:30 | . Well. Well, well, dream of coffee uh in the |
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03:34 | let's I'm sure there is a type log that could be applied to coffee |
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03:39 | , but we'll have to figure that . Great. Well, I I |
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03:45 | up this little guy um here is a suite of logs in the gulf |
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03:52 | Mexico. And just for practice we have a look at these guys |
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03:59 | Um interval C. Is perhaps the interesting. And so if you were |
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04:08 | scan through this you can see that highlighted a few layers of interest. |
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04:16 | Now once again if you go through um how did we how did we |
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04:24 | of pick our layers of interest? looking at the gana log, those |
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04:33 | are really the only ones that have a significant or C. Is the |
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04:38 | like significant one. I mean there's stuff in between B. And |
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04:42 | But when you go through all of , A B. And C. |
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04:46 | the only ones like especially the Itty log, those are really the |
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04:52 | three that like jump out at you then even the density log and |
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05:03 | Oops that's what I meant to Um Well let's walk, let's walk |
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05:15 | layer. See, tell me about C. Okay um layer C. |
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05:22 | so for gamma it's low gamma. I put the scales on the |
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05:27 | Yeah because that person is like I read this and I'm like yeah I |
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05:31 | neither can I. Um So gamma have low gamma. So it's not |
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05:37 | . Um V. P. Nothing crazy what's going on and see um |
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05:48 | . S. We do have an . So that would be a lower |
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05:56 | time. Yes. Okay so we slower transit. So maybe so less |
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06:05 | is less rigid. Lower transit. transit. Oh so that's faster so |
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06:13 | more. Okay, so. so we maybe have a sand. |
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06:22 | , we have high resistive Itty. that goes along with the sand. |
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06:33 | it may or may not. That's , we like it when it does |
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06:40 | usually wouldn't. Okay, so very resistive. Itty. Well, keep |
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06:51 | there for a minute. Um Going the density we have a decrease in |
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07:05 | and our scale is from 1.5 to . So if that 1.5 to |
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07:24 | do I have to? So 0.75 about in the middle. So density |
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07:29 | going to be less than that No, what's the scale? Hold |
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07:44 | , it's 1.5 to 3 two So we have a low density |
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07:54 | Um So going to the next log do have, let's see which one's |
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08:07 | black one? Is that gonna be I'm assuming the red one is the |
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08:16 | . Uh No, the little So density porosity. Okay, so |
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08:25 | see we do have a crossover. , so the again this is why |
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08:31 | of the reason for this exercise is of the logs are plotted the opposite |
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08:36 | . So you have to be alert this case the porosity is zero on |
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08:42 | left, 50% on the right and it's then the density porosity is in |
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08:57 | . So this is about 25 so about 30 to 40% porosity. |
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09:09 | there there are the there are the curves. Yeah, and there's a |
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09:15 | . Really strong crossover and to the is low porosity. So the black |
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09:24 | is the neutron ferocity and the the curve is making an excursion to low |
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09:38 | . Oh, okay, Okay. then that would not be, what |
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09:46 | said was the middle of the So that would be like zero. |
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09:54 | I don't know, maybe like 15 20. Well, I would say |
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10:01 | average is around 25. I think that's about right. But because word |
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10:11 | can see here, the next curve is the their calculation of the |
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10:19 | And so you can see what their is. The next the next curve |
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10:28 | red. 11 to 39. Okay, so it's basically going 10 |
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10:34 | 40 and they're saying it's halfway in and 10 to 40 halfway is |
|
10:44 | So yeah, pushing 30 30% And when they say effective ferocity, |
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10:52 | the flowing ferocity, right? So they've done a they've done a |
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10:58 | calculation to try to get rid of some of the clay effects in |
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11:08 | So that's a little bit less than total ferocity. Okay, and then |
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11:19 | w so that's gonna be this Yeah, and it goes from 0 |
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11:28 | 1. So this is not very with brian. Right, well, |
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11:41 | , yeah, so let's go through now now, you've you've been through |
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11:45 | . So so that's the logic process you're doing this all the time. |
|
11:49 | giving you practice to kind of, through all these steps. Um You've |
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11:53 | through it, you've looked at what values are, we haven't really said |
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11:59 | what's going on yet, but now been through all this, so what's |
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12:03 | on and by what's going on? mean what kind of rock is |
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12:07 | What kind of process does it What kind of permeability and likely what's |
|
12:12 | saturation? Um I think we'll throw off. Is we have a |
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12:23 | But the p wave velocity didn't really much. So that takes me away |
|
12:29 | gas and pushes me to oil. oil wouldn't have that crossover, would |
|
12:36 | ? Well, that crossover is really strong. Yeah, So that |
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12:40 | be gas. Yeah. And the . It e is very well developed |
|
12:47 | the density drops a lot. So here's here's what I would I |
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13:05 | think about that when you look at shear wave velocity, the shear wave |
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13:10 | has jumped a lot, it's getting lot faster. Cbs it's getting a |
|
13:17 | faster. So in principle that rigidity part of the p wave velocity to |
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13:26 | principle, the p wave should be just the lift ology should increase the |
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13:32 | wave velocity. Remember that the p velocity is dependent on the bulk |
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13:39 | Like we talked about K. Or , but it's also dependent on the |
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13:44 | . So we've said that the shear velocity is strictly dependent on the rigidity |
|
13:51 | the numerator. Okay, so the say that the rock is really getting |
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14:00 | for the sheer wave. It should getting fast with faster with the P |
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14:06 | too. But as you pointed it's not so in a sense, |
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14:17 | P wave velocity is decreasing a bunch where. So there's something that's suppressing |
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14:24 | P wave response and the big thing lowers the p wave velocity is |
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14:32 | Okay, that makes sense. I just dampening the effect of the |
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14:36 | so if this were fluid saturated, shear wave velocity would be about the |
|
14:40 | . You'd see a big kick in P wave velocity and it would all |
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14:47 | perfect sense that way too. But we stand right now, we've got |
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14:51 | gamma ray as low so that this in the gulf coast. So we |
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14:58 | that it's largely sad shell. Um that's one thing, we don't see |
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15:05 | in the P wave velocity. So first we just don't know anything about |
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15:08 | . I look at the sheer it's it's increasing. So that tells |
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15:12 | it's probably sad then the resistive. is huge. So that says I've |
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15:17 | got hydrocarbons or it's tight. There's porosity. So that I go over |
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15:24 | I checked the process and it says , no, no, no, |
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15:26 | , no, there's there's lots of . And then they say, oh |
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15:33 | , the resistive, it has to because of hydrocarbons then. And then |
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15:38 | look at the porosity logs and I , wow, there's a huge slam |
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15:42 | crossover in the porosity logs. So gas. And then we go back |
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15:48 | check the density and sure enough, density log has decreased a lot. |
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15:53 | I said, whoa, that's gas . And then I go back and |
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15:57 | at the p wave log, I , oh, you know what? |
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16:00 | should be an increase. But the is knocking the p wave velocity |
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16:06 | So that all makes sense. And when we look at the saturation, |
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16:14 | saturation of water is just about zero . So we're looking at something like |
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16:21 | gas saturation. Mhm. What's TPP for? Oh, where, where |
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16:32 | that? Oh, okay. Well I was doing that was calibrating this |
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16:41 | seismic reflection time to so that's the wave reflection time down to that |
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16:49 | So the I don't whether I think log is actually not plotted in |
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16:56 | I think it's actually plotted in p reflection time. Okay, so you |
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17:05 | , the the logs themselves are our depth. That's how we've done the |
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17:11 | but we're gonna move on to um seismic grams. And as you know |
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17:20 | seismic response, we get a We get an echo in time. |
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17:23 | in depth. So the seismic the seismic volume is in time not |
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17:31 | . So one of the first things we're gonna do is we convert the |
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17:37 | and depth two logs in time in time. And so that's a big |
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17:51 | . We'll probably talk about that in an hour. Okay so it's very |
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17:59 | that we because we're exploration geophysicists and main measurement is seismic and the basic |
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18:12 | measurement is echoes in time. So need to we need to bring all |
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18:23 | our logs into the seismic realm. to do that we have to convert |
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18:29 | logs that are actually in depth to log that would be seen by echoes |
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18:35 | the echoes are in time. So need a velocity to convert the logs |
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18:39 | depth to what they would look like time. And that's been done |
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18:44 | So these logs are actually in seismic time which is proportional to doubt. |
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18:58 | . Okay. And you can see couple of other little horizons here. |
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19:06 | a just quickly what do you think a the interval A. Um. |
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19:19 | so for a we have again below Vp nothing special ves slighty greatest like |
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19:39 | slight um It's just like increase in . Getting faster. Yeah so it's |
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19:46 | in transit time. So it's getting . And then the receptivity. It's |
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19:56 | low resistive. E. Or high . Sorry, um density. We |
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20:02 | have a slight decrease. We don't a crossover. So this would be |
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20:13 | think we have maybe a very small . Well, remember these? Uh |
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20:29 | . Okay. And so sorry, porosity again going on. Oh |
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20:34 | um porosity, we have an So that's going to be about what |
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20:46 | my scallion Colin mm. Atrocity is let's see if that one down there |
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20:57 | about 25. So maybe about 10 . No. So is the scale |
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21:08 | 11 to 39? Or is it ? Yeah, is from 11 to |
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21:12 | . So then that would be about see L 2 39. Mhm. |
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21:27 | be about 14 in the middle. maybe about well, 12 or so |
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21:39 | the porosity. Well, it's the between 10 and 40 in the |
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21:51 | Oh see I always I forget to at the tip. I was looking |
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21:55 | like the where the red isn't. yeah, never mind. I'm |
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22:01 | Yeah. So it's just we're in the middle from 10 to 40. |
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22:06 | around 20. Around 25%. 25% is the same as the other |
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22:14 | Yeah, a little bit less. but in the game. So I |
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22:20 | you're right that if we look at W the saturation of water. Mm |
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22:32 | . A little less than 50. . So among friends say 50%. |
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22:41 | it's 50% saturated with water. What's other 50% again, hydrocarbon? |
|
22:53 | Uh we do see a little kick the density and this one's a little |
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23:06 | trickier. I I think it's this is just the density, the |
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23:17 | porosity, czar may be shifted a bit. This is a little bit |
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23:26 | , but I'd be inclined to think this is kind of mixed. There's |
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23:32 | oil and gas in it in There's often um, a mix and |
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23:40 | it can be called what's called fizz , just low concentrations of gas. |
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23:46 | so the it's because this whole, whole area is a little bit |
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24:01 | You can see that if we look the gamma ray, let's go back |
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24:05 | the gamma ray. Even what we sands. What, what's the value |
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24:11 | the gamma ray there? Let's It goes from 0 to 150. |
|
24:19 | would be 75. So it's And some change or mine has |
|
24:28 | Yeah, 60 ish on the gamma now. Is that a, is |
|
24:31 | a pure sand? Mm No, really. It's it's still a bit |
|
24:40 | . So even what we're calling reservoir is probably a little bit dirty. |
|
24:45 | some there's some shale in there. this whole section is kind of kind |
|
24:50 | dirty and that's that's causing the ferocity to be somewhat separated. So I |
|
25:06 | that it's not as definitive. Obviously the sea is just an incredible slam |
|
25:12 | of a gas reservoir a is not obvious what it is. It looks |
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25:19 | bit oily, but some of the suggest there's a little bit of gas |
|
25:23 | there too. So that, that gets a bit more complicated and we |
|
25:27 | want to look at some other logs then we would do some modeling and |
|
25:32 | probably have the gas chromatograph when we through there. Were there any gas |
|
25:36 | , oil shows? So we, want to be looking at some other |
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25:40 | that kind of nail that one That's a little that layer and it's |
|
25:46 | thin layer too. So it's just little bit, that one's a little |
|
25:50 | to interpret the a layer. But be going with, we like |
|
25:59 | it's thin, it might be worth to produce. It's probably oil with |
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26:05 | gas. The other reservoir deeper. might be the, that might be |
|
26:12 | really good, a really good Okay. Any, any questions about |
|
26:19 | one? It's starting to get Let's look at, let's look at |
|
26:25 | other other logs. Incidentally, this is just north of Montana. So |
|
26:29 | worked in this area for a Um, it was interesting. We |
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26:37 | , we flew into an oil field it was, it was out in |
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26:42 | middle of nowhere and we landed the and the pilot took off, but |
|
26:46 | was, it was totally an abandoned and it turned out that it was |
|
26:50 | the Second World war. They trained lot of pilots flying here because it's |
|
26:53 | flat land and really good flying but nobody there. So what do we |
|
26:59 | now? So we we called, called the oil field operator and he |
|
27:04 | oh there's a big old cadillac and of the sheds, the keys are |
|
27:08 | it. Just go over to the and jumping this big old cadillac and |
|
27:14 | probably get oil field. So that's we did. Absolutely nobody in this |
|
27:20 | big airport. So we made it kind of like a movie. Um |
|
27:28 | here's here's the play. So this this is pretty busy but here's where |
|
27:33 | were working. And once again we've we know a little bit about the |
|
27:38 | . We're we're looking in various we know that the areas are |
|
27:47 | So here's what you get as your geologic column is going to have the |
|
27:53 | units, their ages and conformity And then the the intervals that are |
|
28:00 | to be petroliferos or that are known be hydrocarbon bearing. So we're going |
|
28:05 | be alert to be looking at the and the what was the cantar? |
|
28:12 | these are probably the cretaceous is maybe second biggest oil deposit time in North |
|
28:23 | . So we do our regular We look for the the S. |
|
28:30 | . So I'm scanning down the P. No no, no, |
|
28:35 | . Something interesting in here and then jump over the gamma ray. Uh |
|
28:45 | . Jump over the gamma ray and down maybe very Shelly. No no |
|
28:54 | no. Okay I like that. gamma rays there uh ferocity we're looking |
|
29:07 | again. So the neutron ferocity scanning here and then we go over to |
|
29:14 | money, log the resistive itty and down and I see a couple of |
|
29:23 | that have nice resistive excursions at the here. So that's looking interesting. |
|
29:35 | now let's look at smart detail and you can tell me all about |
|
29:43 | So can you walk, can you us through the logs here? Unfortunately |
|
29:49 | slightly annotated for you and they're not crowded. Okay so on the |
|
29:57 | P. Log we have that pretty section right there. Low sp so |
|
30:06 | . So it's a pretty big vulnerable . Um Then gamma ray, if |
|
30:15 | jump across one gamma we have so we hit that section we have low |
|
30:24 | through that whole area. So it's shale, not shale. And then |
|
30:37 | into the ferocity um Nothing crazy at top of the section. They're in |
|
30:51 | middle and then we have a pretty . Hello there in that dotted section |
|
31:00 | that dash section. Um And then goes back to the middle and then |
|
31:06 | goes low again. So we have sections of that. Hello, is |
|
31:12 | low prostate? It's increasing to the . Yeah, so Prasit e increases |
|
31:18 | the right in this case. So two sections we have low porosity and |
|
31:24 | it increases their at the top in middle. So this is an area |
|
31:34 | what kind of ferocity um Would that considered high porosity or like mid |
|
31:44 | Well it's pretty high, this goes , it's hard to see, this |
|
31:47 | from 0 to 60%. So this around 30 31 or 32% porosity. |
|
31:54 | that's pretty high porosity. I always want to call it like I know |
|
32:00 | mid isn't the thing that I want say because it's like in the middle |
|
32:02 | the chart, but it's relative what scale is. Yeah, you always |
|
32:06 | to look at the scale because it's the middle of the chart, but |
|
32:11 | 30% porosity. So that's I I mean if I only plotted up |
|
32:17 | 30% it would be right on the wouldn't be in the middle anymore. |
|
32:24 | , so it's high porosity. Something weird happens here though, it |
|
32:32 | very low, like almost zero so there's a baffle in there, |
|
32:41 | a there's a low zero porosity. The sp log isn't really seeing |
|
32:52 | so it might have some permeability but actually not very much. So then |
|
33:09 | sonic logs show it's hard to see the units here, but presumably this |
|
33:27 | fast to the left and so we're , we've got the Shelly stuff here |
|
33:34 | relatively slow and then we're get we faster, you can see the P |
|
33:39 | doesn't do much, but the but sheer waves getting faster once again, |
|
33:44 | our good sand indicator. And then gets very fast in here, which |
|
33:51 | that it's completely cemented, zero ferocity cemented. So it's like a tight |
|
34:03 | . Okay. And then um going to our resistive Itty, we see |
|
34:14 | classic again that high resistive itty on of the rez activity tracks again the |
|
34:25 | the shallow is the highest which you'd , but the other ones are pretty |
|
34:30 | um and then we go into very low resistive Itty. So this |
|
34:35 | our classic hydrocarbon oil over water Just so you don't think that these |
|
34:51 | just odd ones. Here's another one you. So we'll just step through |
|
35:02 | to make sure because sometimes people find logs for different purposes and you can |
|
35:07 | here, do you know what the this yellow key is pretty standard with |
|
35:14 | with the dots in it, dots sand, aren't they? Yeah, |
|
35:20 | yellow dot yellow with dots that's typically . Um This is typically limestone. |
|
35:32 | . Okay, so as we now are partially interpreted logs for us |
|
35:37 | Somebody's done most of our work for but the this is supposed to be |
|
35:44 | largely sandstone interval. Mhm. And so we can see the volume |
|
35:57 | shale going from 0 to 100%. it's again, what we say is |
|
36:08 | massive sandstone and it's clearly not really massive sandstone, this is something like |
|
36:14 | couple million years of deposition, so not quite that simple. Some parts |
|
36:20 | very sandy, so that's all Those sandy parts have a high effective |
|
36:30 | , you can see up to around 34%. So that's very good |
|
36:37 | S w the saturation of water is down to maybe 10 or 20%. |
|
36:44 | that means that all the rest of stuff is hydrocarbon and we see a |
|
36:49 | drop in the hydrocarbon a little bit . P and Bs don't show very |
|
36:54 | and this happens to be all heavy . So the saturation of water is |
|
37:04 | 10 or 20%. Um All of Phil is all oil and that's um |
|
37:15 | like 100 ft of oil. So also very intense. Mhm. |
|
37:42 | Now we we can push this all bit farther. We've talked about densities |
|
37:47 | velocities and what people often do is plot those again to figure out more |
|
37:53 | mythology and this was fabulous Ruiz. was one of our master students, |
|
37:58 | probably did, you did, you Fabiola, her name sounds very familiar |
|
38:04 | I can't put face to name, graduated a few years ago and then |
|
38:12 | went to work with E. G. In Fort Worth. So |
|
38:20 | actually did her masters on the marcellus and did a good job and I |
|
38:27 | looking around for a job. So she uh it turned out that the |
|
38:33 | . G. Was going to start in the Marcellus. So they were |
|
38:37 | looking for somebody who knew something about Marcellus, which she did and about |
|
38:42 | and inversions. So they hired and that was that was great. So |
|
38:48 | went from her career as a flamenco to her career as a geophysicist. |
|
38:57 | you can see the interpretation here of logs that she had. This was |
|
39:01 | the Marcellus. So this this was fact an unconventional play. And in |
|
39:06 | area were these are plotting the seismically features. And what we're looking for |
|
39:15 | really mapping those to play content, more importantly, organic content. So |
|
39:27 | in this case we've been talking that activity is mapped to clay and in |
|
39:35 | in the case of an unconventional, doing the opposite thing out to bend |
|
39:38 | brain a little bit. We've always looking for not shale and now we |
|
39:43 | looking for shale, but we want show with very specific characteristics. We |
|
39:50 | high organic content carriage and content in shale that comes from rock samples and |
|
39:59 | . And then in fact of the , we typically want the lowest clay |
|
40:08 | . So we want sand or carbonate in with the shale and the reason |
|
40:15 | want that, we want our cake to eat it too, we want |
|
40:19 | organic content. So it has oil we want it to be brittle so |
|
40:24 | can break it hydraulically fractured. So marcellus has been a huge play in |
|
40:37 | Appalachians and as a shale. But looking for these two things. Once |
|
40:42 | we want high organic content because we oil but and that's usually attached to |
|
40:51 | in the shale. So we're looking shale but we want it to be |
|
40:55 | of the minimal shale like as possible shales as we said are not rigid |
|
41:02 | it's hard, it's hard to hydraulically them. So it's easy to break |
|
41:12 | . Glass is basically silicon dioxide and . It's very rigid. If you |
|
41:19 | a hammer to glass, you know happens? You don't even have to |
|
41:23 | a hammer. Just drop it, breaks. If you drop silly putty |
|
41:27 | the floor, what happens? it doesn't break. So we're looking |
|
41:40 | these characteristics that have high T. . C. And high silicon. |
|
41:47 | that that's just an example that sometimes are looking for shale sometimes not. |
|
41:53 | that's why we want to understand how these logs work so that we can |
|
41:56 | the same logs and just interpret them . So there's just a bit of |
|
42:03 | excursion, there's some other things now showing you kind of the counter examples |
|
42:09 | , so for example we might be for potash, not just oil and |
|
42:14 | , but maybe we're looking for potash happens to be potassium chloride or potassium |
|
42:24 | potassium in it. We want potash make a lot of stuff including |
|
42:43 | So we need we need potassium. of our bodies need potassium and plants |
|
42:49 | everything need um plants need potassium and podcasters, mind and it's going to |
|
43:00 | used for fertilizer. So here's some deposits that have potassium in them. |
|
43:09 | then this these are really horrible but that's what we have. So |
|
43:23 | we can go through all these logs and this is uh you know, |
|
43:27 | are these are kind of hard to , but we can look at the |
|
43:34 | logs and once again when we get evaporates, they read very differently in |
|
43:39 | gamma ray. So of all this mess, let's just look at the |
|
43:44 | ray. So here's our gamma ray you can see that it comes |
|
43:53 | down, down, down, we this evaporate layer and then all of |
|
44:03 | sudden it goes crazy. So what you think is happening here? We |
|
44:12 | go down, we've got zero gamma and then all of a sudden we |
|
44:20 | very radioactive sediments, What do you is happening? Are we starting to |
|
44:31 | like sale shell layers? Well could , but not in this case. |
|
44:43 | else could we be hitting? could we be hitting, Well we |
|
44:51 | just talking about the potassium, so could be hitting like potassium so |
|
45:01 | So you're you're hitting potassium big It's got huge excursions well over 3 |
|
45:10 | 105 100 intensely radioactive. So logging for a different purpose in this |
|
45:21 | we're trying to build a potash So we've drilled it and where's our |
|
45:29 | ? There it is. So we this hole, the pot dashes out |
|
45:35 | 10, 20 m, so 1020 and that's gonna be the top of |
|
45:42 | potash mine right there. So just example if we're looking for potash, |
|
45:58 | use the gamma ray log for a different purpose and in fact about 10 |
|
46:02 | ago, some of the companies who looking for potash actually came to |
|
46:05 | Of H. And they calibrated their ray tools in our our wells here |
|
46:11 | pits. They were, that was of interesting. Where do they get |
|
46:18 | word potash from? Is it like stash or something? Yeah, I |
|
46:25 | think I think that was, I that might have an it that when |
|
46:31 | you actually took this material and heated up, it had potassium, but |
|
46:35 | think it also did have ash so , but we'll have to have to |
|
46:42 | that. Remember looking that up a back, definitely potassium, but maybe |
|
46:49 | residue has this ash like stung. the just out of curiosity, we |
|
47:05 | have a quick look at the ferocity and we can see that the neutron |
|
47:13 | is very very low. So the neutron is thinking that there's no hydrogen |
|
47:26 | . The density log is thinking that a lot of ferocity there and that's |
|
47:39 | to be because the densities themselves will pretty low in the salt. So |
|
47:48 | it says there's a low density Therefore you must have a lot of |
|
47:52 | full of water. But that's not case here. And so the logs |
|
48:01 | are very different. They're basically They're completely disagreeing completely. So there's |
|
48:14 | in a sense there's this huge crossover which normally we would interpret as |
|
48:20 | like huge gas, but in this we're in this salt layer, we're |
|
48:26 | evaporates and so salt is, salt just weird in that they're fairly fast |
|
48:36 | they're low density. So once I'm showing these because we want to |
|
48:50 | what the logs do, what they . And then if you were, |
|
48:53 | you were being employed by a mining , a potash mining company and there |
|
48:59 | a few around the U. Then these are the kinds of logs |
|
49:03 | get accustomed to it, you know what it meant. But this is |
|
49:06 | some early exposure. So podcast looks little bit weird. Um we can |
|
49:13 | at other things, other materials because talked mainly about sands and carbonates and |
|
49:18 | a little bit about salt now, little bit about evaporates, but also |
|
49:24 | what do calls look like. And we can walk across this a little |
|
49:31 | too. So when you think about , have you ever seen cole have |
|
49:41 | ever had a chunk of coal? I think we like had a piece |
|
49:49 | one of the geology classes. You've been bad enough to get cold as |
|
49:56 | as a christmas present. So that's . Um So call if if you |
|
50:02 | pick up a piece of coal, it light or is it heavy? |
|
50:09 | light, isn't it? Yeah, really light. So if we're logging |
|
50:14 | it, what would you expect the to be? Very low density? |
|
50:20 | that's one thing we're thinking of it's not totally obvious, but um |
|
50:30 | think we think of the gamma ray could have natural radio activity. Coal |
|
50:34 | basically a decomposed plant. And there that much that we've talked about with |
|
50:43 | and gas, there's not much that's in that. So coal is kind |
|
50:48 | an organic material. And so would expect it to be radioactive? |
|
50:56 | no. So we don't expect call be radioactive at all. Now, |
|
51:02 | other thing is that coal is really porous and low density. So just |
|
51:11 | a gas, do you think it high velocity or low velocity? It |
|
51:19 | have fast transit time. No, would it would have no velocity. |
|
51:31 | , not totally obvious, but it's it's a pretty light kind of organic |
|
51:36 | high porosity material that's not really very consolidated and all that kind of |
|
51:43 | So you wouldn't really know. But a guest you think that probably has |
|
51:48 | velocity and it does then because it's . Do we what do we expect |
|
52:02 | terms of its electrical properties, its or resistive itty. It's an |
|
52:10 | Hello? Probably probably low conductivity. resistive it because there's nothing conductive about |
|
52:19 | . There's no medal in it. no salt in it necessarily. So |
|
52:28 | kind of expecting that pure coal itself probably fairly resistant because we can put |
|
52:35 | in anything but the coal itself, would expect to be resistant. |
|
52:39 | if you look across here, here's measurements, there are a couple of |
|
52:42 | in here. So we drilled through , you can see we're coming down |
|
52:46 | down uh this goes from the gamma 0 to 300. So this is |
|
52:53 | and 50. So in this upper with gamma ray 250. What do |
|
52:59 | think about that? It's um it's pretty high. 150 is pretty |
|
53:13 | . And so this is all clay crap and it's in the near |
|
53:17 | So only down 300 m 1000 So this is kind of uh fairly |
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53:25 | mucky clay deposition. That is fairly . It's uh you know, it's |
|
53:37 | density is there's gramercy three g per . You know, it's it's not |
|
53:44 | , it's about 2.4 g per So it's starting to get consolidated. |
|
53:50 | wave velocity is somewhere around 3500 m second. So somewhat consolidated. And |
|
53:57 | resistance the there's nothing major happening. resistive et all the way down. |
|
54:02 | it looks to be all probably briny . So that's it. Then we |
|
54:09 | this stuff and you can all of sudden see some real anomalies happening. |
|
54:14 | one, the density drops. P velocity drops, shear wave velocity |
|
54:20 | So it's not like it's a gas sand because the rigidity of the material |
|
54:28 | gone down to not just the compressed . So we hit this it's lower |
|
54:34 | it's got some strings in it. lower gamma ray and it's got some |
|
54:39 | resistive. It ease. So but it's this density, this density going |
|
54:45 | to like one point almost 1.3 or g per CC. That's very, |
|
54:57 | light. And even a gas saturated probably wouldn't be that low density. |
|
55:04 | , this is a real kicker for . Mhm. Low radio activity, |
|
55:13 | resistive. Itty, very low density very low P. And shear wave |
|
55:19 | . So those characterized the the Now, one of the reasons we |
|
55:27 | about this is number one we might prospecting for coal. There's metallurgical |
|
55:31 | there's there's cool that we are interested . But we might be looking for |
|
55:38 | fields around this. And the problem this area is with a very changed |
|
55:48 | and velocity. If we have a wave coming down, what happens when |
|
55:54 | hit this very different impedance? That's you would it bounces off it? |
|
56:06 | is a very strong impedance contrast. density and the velocity are very |
|
56:14 | So it's like having to slink ease different sizes. So the waves come |
|
56:21 | and they hit this and they do penetrate very much. They bounce |
|
56:26 | Strong acoustic impedance and elastic impedance That means that most of the energy |
|
56:35 | reflected back to the surface, which it's hard to penetrate this to see |
|
56:40 | below it with seismic energy. And gets worse as far as seismic goes |
|
56:56 | some there's a little bit of energy does get through here. But then |
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57:02 | happens, it happens again, it again. So I slip a little |
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57:12 | of energy through here and then it another big impedance contrast and bounces |
|
57:18 | But then it's hitting the underside of so it can't get back so it |
|
57:23 | around in here. That's called multi thing. And that's the multiple, |
|
57:32 | an intra bed or between bed And now it really screws us |
|
57:48 | So multiple just means that I've got bounces inside here and it's trapping my |
|
57:56 | and I can't see below it, because it's bouncing around in here when |
|
58:03 | process it, it actually looks like layer below that. So not only |
|
58:09 | not seeing a real layer, I'm a false layer, so that really |
|
58:17 | us. And it's it's it's a . And so we have to, |
|
58:22 | we're processing seismic data, we worry lot about this kind of stuff and |
|
58:25 | try to got a lot of techniques try to get rid of these multiple |
|
58:30 | of these multi path thing, energy this reverberation here because I want to |
|
58:36 | down here because there's goodies down There are hydrocarbon goodies. But it's |
|
58:42 | for me to see anything through here the seismic role. So that's another |
|
58:47 | that we're interested in the coal signature we're gonna simulate this and then see |
|
58:52 | we can get rid of its So once again, if we if |
|
59:02 | look at another another case, we're down deeper. And uh we've got |
|
59:08 | gamma ray logs, sp logs, logs, they're all fairly correlated. |
|
59:15 | we're coming down these coal layers are thin and you can see the the |
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59:21 | track here, the resistive itty high resistive itty. And then we |
|
59:28 | look at the density or the you can see all these places where |
|
59:38 | is an automatic flag for coal. once again, we've got low gamma |
|
59:45 | hi rez festivity and low density and putting those three together, that's that's |
|
59:51 | call flag. Okay, so once , another, another kind of |
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60:26 | Look at another case. So low , low gamma, low sp, |
|
60:40 | resistive. Itty. Cool. so those are some of the some |
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60:51 | the conventional logs and our our view them. But let's let's take a |
|
60:56 | 10 minute break, Stephanie and then come back. Okay? Hi |
|
61:08 | Hello. Okay. Yeah, let's on. We're stepping our way through |
|
61:20 | these logs and and then what we see with them. And we talked |
|
61:25 | little bit about this before. It perhaps a very simple log is just |
|
61:29 | video camera. So you can see device here, a schematic diagram of |
|
61:37 | that just actually has a video camera lights and this is a downward looking |
|
61:46 | . We can also imagine a different . One that would be a side |
|
61:50 | camera. And clearly these aren't gonna too much in an oil well or |
|
62:01 | standard gas well. But for for water well that has clear water or |
|
62:09 | a well that is evacuated or does contain fluids. This is a good |
|
62:24 | . And here are the kind of that one would see again with a |
|
62:28 | looking and good if again if it's water or if it's only slightly dark |
|
62:34 | , we can see fractures. For going through this particular. Well, |
|
62:42 | , now there are some other more , what are called imaging tools. |
|
62:47 | are tools that just are trying to a picture of this, the more |
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62:50 | wall and part of this is for purposes for faults for um looking at |
|
63:00 | dips of various layers. And so how they work. There are two |
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63:06 | types of tools. One is an tool and in this case we have |
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63:17 | a transducer, ultrasonic transducer that creates little vibration and then it has a |
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63:27 | an area within the tool that with and there's fluid in here so the |
|
63:33 | just spins around. So we've got tool a little vibration, The reflector |
|
63:38 | spinning around. So it's just making ultrasonic scan of the side of the |
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63:43 | wall. And what it does is we measure. So at every point |
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63:49 | there we measure the time that it to go through the fluid and measure |
|
63:53 | from our whole wall. So it's high frequency. You measure the time |
|
63:57 | well as you look at the amplitude you just put all those together to |
|
64:01 | the amplitudes of the times. And gives a picture of the borehole |
|
64:05 | So that's really an echo sounding, an acoustic picture of the wall. |
|
64:11 | , the other thing you can do to have electrodes. And so we've |
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64:15 | multi electrodes with a little pad that measures the resistance. Again, it's |
|
64:21 | resistive itty tool, the resistance across pad and it looks at all the |
|
64:26 | around the formation and makes an electrical picture of the more whole wall. |
|
64:33 | two types of tools making the mechanical acoustical and electrical. And when we |
|
64:42 | at those pictures, so what we is that you can imagine that the |
|
64:52 | is the cylinder. So we made scan of the inside of the |
|
64:58 | But then to make a picture of , I just unfold that. So |
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65:03 | again we've got our borehole, that's cylinder. We make a scan on |
|
65:08 | inside and then just unfold that. that's the picture that we're looking |
|
65:15 | So they the picture over here say marvel television. This is the amplitude |
|
65:24 | the little ultrasonic pulse that came back every different area than the tool |
|
65:33 | every different area, every different every different area and then we see |
|
65:37 | picture and the sine wave. Can reconstruct what the sine wave is |
|
65:54 | Yeah. So in this picture we've a sine wave. But what is |
|
65:59 | ? Sorry? So you're you're asking what caused it or like what's wouldn't |
|
66:07 | just be like a fracture or Yeah, but why does it look |
|
66:10 | a sine wave? Because I mean it's I mean it's a flattened |
|
66:32 | I'm not I'm not sure why it be assigned specifically. I'm gonna do |
|
66:41 | right now. Um Okay so suppose got a borehole like this. I |
|
66:50 | take the piece of paper. You do this too. So here's here's |
|
66:56 | borehole and then suppose there was a or a layer that went right through |
|
67:06 | . So let me see if I do that. So effectively there's a |
|
67:13 | that goes right through this. So is just a layer. Okay you |
|
67:30 | see when when I put that Okay let's see it. So that's |
|
67:42 | just a basic construction when a cylinder cut by a plane and you unwrap |
|
67:54 | the cylinder, the plane cut is sinus line. So you can imagine |
|
68:05 | we take this this left picture which just a panel but it's really the |
|
68:12 | inside of the cylinder. Now if wrap this right part back to the |
|
68:18 | part that I think you could probably that that becomes a lips and the |
|
68:24 | is just a cut through a So this is really if we wrap |
|
68:32 | again, it's really just on the and on the inside of a borehole |
|
68:35 | plane or cut through the bore hole an ellipse on the borehole. Then |
|
68:40 | we unwrap it it looks like a like. So this sign is the |
|
68:50 | image of a dipping layer on the of the Warhol. Now that's the |
|
68:56 | picture, that's just the amplitude, travel time tells us that the but |
|
69:07 | has a little bit of of a into the barbell, it's it's faster |
|
69:17 | that might mean that this fault has in it and there's a bit of |
|
69:22 | on the inside of that fault. it could be that this is just |
|
69:34 | a stringer. A dipping stringer of kind. Probably not, but it |
|
69:38 | be a dipping stringer that's a little more resistant than the rest of the |
|
69:43 | hole. Now um The ran they ran the resistive itty log and the |
|
70:01 | . The log only has four pads it and it's rotating a little |
|
70:04 | So it's got four pads that are measurement. So it doesn't measure everywhere |
|
70:08 | the borehole wall, but it gets of it to give us an indication |
|
70:13 | that this fault or fracture or uh layer has a different resistive Itty. |
|
70:21 | fact it's more conductive than the other . So it just gives us an |
|
70:26 | that there's some kind of plain or and which they identify as a |
|
70:31 | Um And those are the those are types of pictures. So this is |
|
70:39 | an image of the inside of the to tell us something about what's happening |
|
70:44 | the layering or the faulting or These image logs are often used for |
|
70:50 | because our other lives don't really see fractures as much. So if we're |
|
70:56 | in that then we have to run other lines. Now we can interpret |
|
71:07 | a bit more quantitatively and you can that probably the shallowest excursion on this |
|
71:15 | is in the west, the deepest is in the east. So I've |
|
71:22 | my board hole like this, then can see that dipping from west to |
|
71:31 | is the dip of the fracture. so computer programs are gonna try to |
|
71:39 | different sinus sides to that and from amplitude of the sine inside and then |
|
71:45 | direction, figure out the dip and azimuth of the fracture. And so |
|
71:52 | will be done automatically too. So we go. We've got the, |
|
72:00 | the resistive itty scanner here and then ultrasonic borehole image. They're here and |
|
72:06 | gonna fit the curves and then make picture of that. So once again |
|
72:15 | our unwrapped cylinder. We can see nice curves. If we wrap that |
|
72:19 | , that'd be an ellipse idle Then I can see here um the |
|
72:28 | is sort of in the south direction the amplitude of this tells us how |
|
72:35 | the dip is. And then that's on what's called the tadpole plot. |
|
72:47 | that's that's how we uh interpret these . So what exactly does this |
|
72:56 | Well, uh we've got a scale it's in degrees. So this is |
|
73:02 | the amount of depth going from zero to 90 degrees. So once |
|
73:16 | if we had a low a low dip, it would have a very |
|
73:23 | peak to trough. Excursion. If got a very high angle death, |
|
73:29 | gonna have a high when I unwrap , it's gonna have a high sign |
|
73:32 | a large sign inside then from the of the maximum to the minimum. |
|
73:39 | gives me my dip surface and that me the direction. So this we |
|
73:48 | these guys the way they plot them just like a compass. So this |
|
73:54 | pointing in a south southwest direction. that this dip is in the south |
|
74:04 | direction. And here is the angle the angle goes from 0 to |
|
74:20 | And we have to look at the what their definition is. So this |
|
74:26 | typically going to be from from the . So um that's that's how we |
|
74:53 | interpret fractures on an image log. you can see as kind of processing |
|
75:02 | . We would, if we are a computer program that would do |
|
75:06 | we would just try different scientists voids cross correlate them with this image and |
|
75:12 | see which amplitude and shift correspond to best coherence. And then have the |
|
75:19 | extract that number for the orientation and amount of depth, I'm not gonna |
|
75:33 | so with that first one, would be like that top green pin? |
|
75:37 | that would be like 55 degrees to northeast, this guy right here. |
|
75:46 | . Uh No in this one it's to be let's see 10 2030 40 |
|
75:57 | almost 60 degrees to the southwest. okay. Oh so I was okay |
|
76:10 | I was thinking the pen was going the direction of like a northeast, |
|
76:15 | , compass. Yeah and it's it's gonna depend typically the leg points in |
|
76:25 | direction of death. That's true. , so let's see, let's so |
|
76:42 | on the standard, this is going be south in the middle. So |
|
76:47 | can see that here's here's here's one the definitions back here. So we |
|
76:54 | north east, south west across the we're starting out at north here. |
|
77:03 | we know that north is the highest and east south west, north north |
|
77:13 | the highest point and south is the point. So this is more or |
|
77:17 | dipping to the south so we can that that's strictly because the way they |
|
77:23 | , this is north here, east in the middle. And so that |
|
77:30 | is dipping down to the south and can see the plot here. The |
|
77:36 | tail of the tadpole is dipping more less. It's slightly we said this |
|
77:42 | north east, south west north. this is slightly off center, it's |
|
77:50 | to the west. So you can they're extracted Tadpole is slightly to the |
|
77:57 | . Okay, that makes sense. let's look down here, they've they've |
|
78:06 | these blue traces. So if they you can see a little bit |
|
78:11 | So it's not, most of most the stuff up here is dipping slightly |
|
78:17 | the south. But if you look this stuff they've extracted some other traces |
|
78:21 | can kind of see but here here's traces they've extracted. So in this |
|
78:25 | north is deeper. South is So if we look at the |
|
78:34 | which way do you expect the tail point? And this this is just |
|
78:41 | looking down on a compass. so then it would be, so |
|
79:00 | here's north, here's south, south higher. North is lower. So |
|
79:09 | going to be dipping to the north the north to the north. You |
|
79:14 | the little blue tadpoles here and these broader excursions. So that means that |
|
79:27 | almost they're sub vertical or they're going to 90 degrees. So this little |
|
79:34 | has a big excursion. The south high so it's dipping to the north |
|
79:43 | it's close to vertical. And so can see the the plot here. |
|
79:52 | can see that little guy there. . So part one is, here's |
|
80:01 | the image log itself and you look this. First of all we'd |
|
80:09 | hey there are a lot of fractures or betting or something. There might |
|
80:19 | some cross beds because these disagree. got some of it that's dipping |
|
80:24 | some of it's dipping north. So might be some general strategic graffiti is |
|
80:32 | . But then inside that you've got beds that are dipping the other way |
|
80:38 | that grossly dipping against. So this be cross bedded or something or it |
|
80:44 | be multiple faulted and no, they interpreted this differently so they've said that |
|
80:54 | green that's bedding and it kind of like very consistent bedding. That doesn't |
|
81:01 | like a fault because you wouldn't expect false maybe so perfectly aligned. And |
|
81:09 | is thicker too and it's got a thickness. So they've interpreted that the |
|
81:14 | is in green but there's faulting. we've got the bedding dipping but now |
|
81:21 | faulted and maybe their conjugate faults or like that. So the faulting is |
|
81:26 | the opposite direction. That's their interpretation . That makes some sense. So |
|
81:42 | . So once again with these we're we're scanning on the inside of the |
|
81:46 | . We can do that two ways can do with an ultrasonic pulse and |
|
81:49 | echo. Like a megahertz little ultrasonic . We can measure the amplitude coming |
|
81:54 | or the transit time and we can a caliper against the border wall and |
|
82:01 | micro little electrodes on it that are the resistive itty right on the border |
|
82:06 | from all different pads. So we make two different kind of pictures from |
|
82:12 | . Typically we're gonna be looking at or fracturing and then the plains of |
|
82:23 | or fracturing show up on a two . Page as plainer cuts through a |
|
82:32 | that are sinus. I'd like looking can wrap this around in your mind |
|
82:36 | think that it's just an ellipse. then we extract the dip of that |
|
82:41 | well as the orientation. And that's we want to get out of |
|
82:43 | So that's what the log is. gonna tell us where the fracturing of |
|
82:47 | betting is and how intense it These aren't as common because they're expensive |
|
82:54 | . And so you have to be for something quite particular like fractures. |
|
83:04 | you can see that they can become complicated. Here's the here's the |
|
83:10 | we scanned our log. Here's the from the log. When we unwrap |
|
83:16 | paper on the cylinder. This case plotted it a different way they've got |
|
83:22 | on the edges and north. We to know which way they're plotting. |
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83:26 | then you're going to correlate and extract features you can from this and then |
|
83:34 | that up. And so in this they show that most if we look |
|
83:41 | each one of these tadpoles, they're horizontal, so only 10 or 15 |
|
83:50 | . And you can see that from , they're pretty flat. So most |
|
83:53 | these features are fairly flat. And when we look down on this and |
|
83:59 | like a compass, where do they ? Most features are dipping. We'll |
|
84:05 | right around here. What's the dip features around 3700 m. Um around |
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84:14 | . They're dipping to the south west . No north south east. Yeah |
|
84:29 | we're just looking at this as a northeast southwest. The dip is more |
|
84:35 | the south east. Now let's go and see if that makes sense |
|
84:46 | So Supposing that we go back this might not be the same |
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84:57 | That's why I got confused cause I looking over there and I said |
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84:59 | wait. Yeah. Well the you know the the deepest part on |
|
85:11 | of this stuff is so this this this is not directly related to |
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85:19 | These are schematics from different areas. , but reading this guy whenever it's |
|
85:24 | from this is saying that I've got like 15 or 20 degree dip to |
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85:29 | southeast here. But you can see changes as we go down deeper in |
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85:34 | particular case. All of a sudden getting other dips that are to the |
|
85:41 | that looks more like here. So we could, you know, |
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85:50 | you're gonna get to look at this detail, then you can start to |
|
85:54 | something if you build a geologic model your mind. And what we've been |
|
85:59 | at with all the other logs is kind of a one dimensional picture that's |
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86:05 | . What this log is trying to is to give us some some really |
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86:10 | dimensional information because remember everything we did was just one d we're getting the |
|
86:17 | right at that. Well and a away from it. And we kind |
|
86:21 | imagine that all the layers are Which is true for a lot. |
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86:26 | in some cases of course we've got . So even though we're logging just |
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86:33 | one line, if I could, really like to know a little bit |
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86:38 | what's going on geologically away from So the, these tadpole plots can |
|
86:50 | us an indication of the dip in rock too. So that's why they're |
|
86:58 | . So we're getting not just this is all sand, which are |
|
87:02 | logs are gonna give us, that's the sand. It's got this |
|
87:05 | , it's got this permeability, it's this saturation. Great. So I |
|
87:09 | that right here. But can I anything about what's happening or the trends |
|
87:13 | anything else? And so that's where , these image logs can help us |
|
87:17 | . And then can we say something a fractured? Are there naturally fractured |
|
87:22 | ? And so those are just things can help, I like image logs |
|
87:26 | great. They're just not as common they're expensive. So the other aspect |
|
87:35 | we talked about this a bit but say from the acoustic log we |
|
87:40 | a travel time and from the center here, we can actually see if |
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87:46 | travel time is longer, then that kind of another caliper log and that |
|
87:54 | help us and if we can see it's longer and we can look at |
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87:59 | reflectivity, just the echo from the , then maybe we can say it's |
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88:04 | and it's also fractured and does the go this way or this way and |
|
88:08 | gonna tell us whether it's a natural or maybe a drilling induced fracture or |
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88:14 | it is. So we can get even more from this. So we've |
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88:21 | our our unraveled log, I can at the the fracture but then I |
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88:29 | also look at whether I've got a radius or a large radius and then |
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88:37 | at the patterns of the breakouts to what might be drilling induced a drilling |
|
88:44 | fracture versus a natural fraction. So can push the interpretation of these lives |
|
88:51 | little bit to tell us about stress Iraq and what we're really doing is |
|
89:07 | trying to uh but all these logs so we can figure out as much |
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89:12 | possible. So there are ideas that want to do is make as many |
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89:19 | as possible. This happens to be a medical aspect and these have to |
|
89:28 | my knees. But you can see the x ray image of the knees |
|
89:37 | then you can see an M. . I. Image of the |
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89:51 | And you can see that this knee irritating me a little bit. |
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89:58 | But the point here is that in we use all these different images. |
|
90:02 | using M. R. I. which are, you know, the |
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90:08 | magnetically induced wobbles of radio waves in knee and we can use x |
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90:15 | the x ray absorption. And that's X ray picture here is really the |
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90:20 | of x rays and bones absorb more flesh. And so we get this |
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90:26 | picture with M. R. This is really a picture of |
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90:33 | And so we get that. And of course if you're an interpreter, |
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90:37 | you're a bone interpreter you're going to looking at all these various details comparing |
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90:42 | to this, seeing what the problem here or what the anomaly is. |
|
90:45 | that's just really what we do We're looking for all the different |
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90:51 | all the anomalies and trying to typically something that's different now that brings us |
|
90:58 | these NMR logs, the nuclear magnetic logs which are a little bit more |
|
91:08 | and are used but again sort of specialist blog. But the generally there's |
|
91:22 | lot of processing that goes on. the the general idea is that we |
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91:29 | first of all that we've got very magnets. Then we've got a very |
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91:36 | magnetic field. Then we put a in that very strong magnetic field and |
|
91:44 | moments of the hydrogen atom uh can made to process. So this is |
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91:53 | it works. You put a radio policy in and that kind of pushes |
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92:00 | magnetic moment of the the proton and processes and as it processes it radiates |
|
92:10 | radio frequency wave and we measure So this is more or less how |
|
92:19 | . R. E. S. . Have you had one? Have |
|
92:21 | had an MRI scan? Um I think I've had an M. |
|
92:29 | I. I think I had something with my liver one time but I |
|
92:34 | know if he was an M. . I. Yeah you might have |
|
92:37 | you probably had an ultrasonic scan because lots of ultrasounds. Probably. Yeah |
|
92:46 | they're used a lot just because they're vibrations. And so they they are |
|
92:54 | risky at all for you or for child or. So they're they're they're |
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93:02 | a lot with pregnancy just because they're they're not radiating, they're not ionizing |
|
93:08 | . So it doesn't harm the child you. Um These these guys are |
|
93:14 | bit more intense because they in the they put you in a large |
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93:20 | you're bad and you go through that chamber is a superconducting magnet. And |
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93:26 | again with this M. R. . It works by putting material such |
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93:31 | me or you in this area, a very strong magnetic field put around |
|
93:40 | . Then there's a a little radio pulse that causes all the water nuclei |
|
93:47 | hydrogen nuclei to process. And then go around and you measure the procession |
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93:52 | all those and it basically is a scan of water concentration. So that's |
|
94:05 | way it works. And then you this and then you look at the |
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94:11 | or the processing of the nuclei, spinning around and they're processing, you |
|
94:17 | at the frequency and how they And that gives an idea of water |
|
94:22 | , hydrogen concentration and then basically water . So that's uh that's done for |
|
94:31 | rock. And this uh you can a very, very high intensity magnetic |
|
94:40 | , a radio frequency device, it the rock and then you look at |
|
94:44 | processions and the periods. And then that extract how much hydrogen is in |
|
94:52 | material. So this is a game kind of a nuclear log. But |
|
95:01 | good thing is that it's not injecting into the formation. So you don't |
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95:06 | to handle cesium or admiration beryllium or don't have to handle these radioactive |
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95:12 | If you're if you're logging engineer and in the truck, you're gonna be |
|
95:16 | a radio activity badge or something and gonna have to be very careful about |
|
95:20 | the sources and so we don't really to do that. So this other |
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95:25 | determined ferocity is good. So one log, it's an N. |
|
95:33 | R. A magnetic resonance imaging log also gives us uh ferocity. |
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95:44 | so that's that's most of our logs are, that are used their little |
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95:50 | that are being developed all the Any any kind of physics. Somebody |
|
95:54 | try to put it in a logging and see if we can make some |
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95:57 | out of it, um what NMR nuclear magnetic resonance logging as far as |
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96:07 | , usually trying to find the details ferocity and uh and water saturation. |
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96:16 | , once again, you can see number of wells that are drilled something |
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96:21 | half a million water wells are drilled year in the US. So you |
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96:29 | want to be logging those to figure everything about the mythology. And so |
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96:35 | example, this study in Denver was to find out much more about the |
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96:39 | because we've got cities say Denver out , you're looking for, how |
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96:44 | how does water recharge and get to ? And so they were interested in |
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96:48 | at all these water wells and getting chemistry and the ferocity ease and the |
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96:55 | and they were using NMR logging for . So we've talked mainly about the |
|
97:04 | world, which is great. But just to think about water well |
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97:08 | So our water wells are typically more , like around 202 103 100,000 ft |
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97:18 | you're unlucky a little bit deeper. the the problem about going deeper for |
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97:28 | is what I'm trying to drill a . Well I haven't found it. |
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97:32 | I keep on going deeper. What's problem with drilling deeper? Um Well |
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97:44 | one, you gotta get it what did we say about deeper water |
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97:54 | ? Oh it gets salty. yeah, so unfortunately you can't drill |
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98:03 | deep or the water is gonna get , it's gonna be briny. So |
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98:11 | most water wells are going to be or not at all, you're |
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98:17 | you're just out of like, but around here that's why we drilled the |
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98:23 | in Lamarque down to 400 ft because main aquifer in those parts is at |
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98:30 | 450 ft. So we just went the very top of the aquifer. |
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98:34 | were not trying to find water, were just trying to drill an educational |
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98:38 | of wells so we don't want it don't want it to flow. So |
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98:59 | again in logging a water well, uh like first of all we we've |
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99:07 | a well and in this case you see that it's really watched it a |
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99:17 | now we didn't, we didn't really this level of, of washing and |
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99:23 | in the oil wells. Why do think that might be what's different |
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99:36 | Well it's different. I mean the looks, it does and why why |
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99:43 | that be um will those be, , those wouldn't be a washout. |
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99:58 | Is it just like a super permeable ? Yeah, more or less we're |
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100:03 | the near surface, it's unconsolidated. just, I don't know what this |
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100:10 | , this is from pennsylvania someplace but the near surface it's probably just un |
|
100:16 | , You're drilling through soil and slump materials and it's just washing out so |
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100:26 | you're going to have to do in wells is you're gonna have to drill |
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100:30 | and then get casing in it because these wells slump and cave in as |
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100:39 | well will but you can imagine if in a nice um limestone from west |
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100:47 | in the near surface, you're gonna it and it's gonna stay as a |
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100:51 | hole for a million years. But I'm in soil around here and I |
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100:58 | drill this hole and I don't do , it's gonna just fill itself in |
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101:01 | short order. So you can see what then we look at the gamma |
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101:07 | and what do you think with the ring? Um I mean it's jumping |
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101:18 | in like small sections, but what the yellow telling us isolated. And |
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101:28 | let's see, so like right there like one and two. It's kind |
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101:36 | a wait, I'm looking at the . The gamma. It's a little |
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101:44 | right there are so high gamma. then you go to low gamma and |
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101:49 | a little high again. But you a really high gamma down there between |
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101:56 | and five. Yeah, but this water. So why is it? |
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102:15 | , they're they're interested this is getting a slightly more advanced part. They're |
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102:21 | measuring, they would have a little down there. So they're measuring water |
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102:26 | , which is another log we could we could have a tool that just |
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102:30 | have a spinner on it, a , a fan and as water comes |
|
102:36 | or goes out of the hole, can measure movement of water, which |
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102:39 | what they're plotting here, that there's lot of different stuff happening. But |
|
102:46 | can see that water is basically coming the bar of all here, the |
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102:50 | areas and then it's exiting from the , so that the circulation patterns from |
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102:59 | pressure water to low pressure water in intervals in the earth. That's why |
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103:06 | you're drilling these wells, you do to isolate, you have to case |
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103:09 | multiple because the water from one level flow into the water from another |
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103:14 | might flow into the water from another and everything else. So the water |
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103:19 | tends to mix in the near surface all the different aquifers. And so |
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103:23 | plotting some of that here for our . You can see that there's some |
|
103:30 | that are sandy, but all this is pretty clay, like it's all |
|
103:38 | high gamma. Although, look at , this isn't counts per second. |
|
103:42 | have not calibrated their tool in api because they're not oil industry guys, |
|
103:53 | that should really be calibrated api but we're gonna take the counts per |
|
103:59 | or pretty close. So down this is a sandy layer and you |
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104:04 | see that it's also very resistive. we're probably thinking that that is fresh |
|
104:13 | nice and fresh one. So if we were looking to produce areas, |
|
104:37 | are probably doing that. So in words, my interpretation of their isolation |
|
104:42 | is they're probably plugging this, these areas, they're not allowing anything to |
|
104:48 | there. So we're going to produce here, this is probably nice sand |
|
104:54 | from there. Maybe produce a little from here. We uh might |
|
105:03 | water might not want water to go there and this doesn't look like it's |
|
105:09 | necessarily do that anyway. So, this is just really an example of |
|
105:14 | we use the same kind of but for a different purpose. |
|
105:18 | we're looking for resistant areas, probably of fresh water. We're looking for |
|
105:24 | because they're going to have higher ferocity likely be our, our aquifers and |
|
105:32 | we can deploy different tools that are production related tools. These will have |
|
105:36 | so that we can actually see what's movement of the water, not just |
|
105:42 | possible kind of mixing of salinity is actually gonna look for water flow and |
|
105:54 | a kind of standard number. So is gallons per minute. So |
|
106:00 | this isn't, these aren't really big wells or anything, this is a |
|
106:05 | of gallons per minute. If we're a subdivision, you know, I |
|
106:12 | want to see a couple of gallons second or something like that. |
|
106:19 | so that that's kind of the static and then start to move a little |
|
106:26 | into dynamic logs. And then when talking about flow itself, this is |
|
106:33 | a little bit more in the the production area and the reservoir engineering |
|
106:38 | . We have looked at a little of a permeability, but then in |
|
106:45 | background, what do we, why we care about that? And it |
|
106:49 | to do with flow? And we're looking at water but we also wanted |
|
106:53 | outflow of oil and so you can that the flow of a fluid depends |
|
106:59 | the pressure difference between the entrance and exit. So the pressure difference across |
|
107:07 | . And as you can imagine if easy or permeable that enhances the |
|
107:12 | if we've got a bigger area that the flow. If we've got a |
|
107:17 | viscosity or a small number here that the flow and the shorter the |
|
107:23 | That means Ella's short, that enhances flow. So this is Darcy's live |
|
107:30 | it's pretty, it's pretty intuitive. blow on a pipe mark comes out |
|
107:37 | other end, if you take the out of the pipe, you can |
|
107:41 | more through it. If the pipes and wider, it will produce |
|
107:45 | And if the fluid itself is lower , it comes out of faster. |
|
107:53 | that's really Darcy's law, we are to talk too much about that except |
|
107:59 | we would give the engineers and the simulator guys a full picture of |
|
108:11 | the area of interest, the the porosity, the permeability of |
|
108:18 | We would maybe tell them a little about the viscosity of the fluid and |
|
108:22 | they would put it in the simulator different pressures and see what flow you |
|
108:27 | get out of it. And so exactly where most of this stuff eventually |
|
108:32 | . We're going to build a three . Model of all these rock properties |
|
108:36 | the fluids and then hand that off the reservoir. Engineers with simulators and |
|
108:41 | are going to simulate how the well flow. Then they're going to flow |
|
108:50 | well for a few weeks and months see how that matches the simulation. |
|
108:58 | then they're gonna tweak the parameters of of the volume and of the the |
|
109:06 | and the pressures and then try to the production. So that's called history |
|
109:14 | . So they're going to try to the production and then they're gonna say |
|
109:20 | think we can produce this field for years at these rates. So this |
|
109:23 | going to be your ultimate recoverable And that's what you're going to book |
|
109:32 | your reserve and that's the number that's to go directly to the stock |
|
109:41 | And then like we looked at that's your reserve number and you're gonna |
|
109:48 | that barrels by 100,000 bucks and that's your resource, that's what you're worth |
|
110:02 | . Okay, so that's a game where we're where we're going. So |
|
110:12 | have a quick look at a case uses some of these wells and puts |
|
110:22 | whole idea into perspective. So here's here's a little case that a friend |
|
110:32 | mine was working as a consultant for company. This company ran a three |
|
110:40 | seismic over a few areas and he and the company decided not to pursue |
|
110:53 | it. So he recommended that they it, the company decided not |
|
110:59 | And so they walked away from it so he always had it in his |
|
111:05 | that he'd like to go back and drill it because they didn't want |
|
111:09 | So when a certain amount of time , he bought the rights to the |
|
111:17 | and also started to assemble the land here and get the rights, Talk |
|
111:23 | all the farmers and everything. This in California, talk to everybody because |
|
111:27 | wanted to drill this and then the it works, he went around and |
|
111:33 | put this play together this prospect together seismic interpretation and the targets and the |
|
111:41 | costs. And he went around to his friends and business associates and |
|
111:46 | would you guys like to buy into plate? So a number of people |
|
111:56 | included, we said, yeah, , we'll give you, we'll buy |
|
112:01 | of that, we'll give you some and you can put this all together |
|
112:05 | raise money and drill as well. that's really how the small guys |
|
112:15 | So we actually went out to the and we're on site and he drove |
|
112:19 | so so you can see that on seismic here, we've talked about this |
|
112:23 | a gas prone area. So that bright spots, what's called a bright |
|
112:29 | . That's a high amplitude reflection. bright spots, a high amplitude |
|
112:39 | And on the seismic data we can a number of these bright spots. |
|
112:44 | the interpretation is that their gas saturated causing a big decrease in density. |
|
112:50 | we've looked at the decrease in density in velocity gives a big contrast and |
|
112:56 | a big reflection off the top of . So these high amplitude reflections called |
|
113:01 | spots. We interpret those to be saturated sediments. And that's what he |
|
113:08 | on the plate. So then we the well said we're going to |
|
113:13 | In fact, we're so smart. gonna deviate, we're gonna place the |
|
113:17 | that we hit all of these targets one well and that's, we |
|
113:32 | So went out to California and drove well. It was all very exciting |
|
113:41 | . We can look at the, volume of seismic and just extract only |
|
113:46 | high aptitudes and now we can see . There's the well trajectory boom and |
|
113:58 | here's our classic so we can go and start looking at the the well |
|
114:08 | . So now we've drilled the well here are classic logs. Just a |
|
114:15 | snippet of them. So what do think? Well, caliber looks |
|
114:35 | We have low gamma. Yeah, have a lowest gamma. What's, |
|
114:45 | um, mm B um Actually, not sure. Um Okay, so |
|
115:00 | off those, they look good. , so we can see once |
|
115:05 | when we look through here, here's gamma ray. There's a there's a |
|
115:12 | sandy nous there, which is And you can see that the interpretation |
|
115:17 | yes, you've got a little bit sandy Nous there. So that's |
|
115:23 | And then we go to our resistive lives. Mhm. That one area |
|
115:35 | higher resistant li that's the deep. that's that's good. Then we've got |
|
115:47 | density porosity and our neutron ferocity. what do we see? Nice |
|
115:56 | nice crossover P. E. Tells we've got some Sandy Nous. |
|
116:13 | So uh that's a little sand. one. Great. The problem is |
|
116:28 | these are all something like one or ft. So it's a sand, |
|
116:34 | gas saturated but it's pretty thin. . So that's that was target number |
|
116:45 | . Target number two. Let's get one. So once again, the |
|
116:53 | . Okay, gamma ray has got little bit in there, come over |
|
117:00 | it. He's got a nice kick us. Frosty lives Cross over |
|
117:06 | Good. Guess what target to another sand. So now we're starting to |
|
117:12 | that we're really smart. Target three deal little little cleaning areas of the |
|
117:25 | ray. Small sands, good kicks the resistive. The logs and nice |
|
117:35 | on the ferocity logs good target for quite as exciting, but a little |
|
117:49 | little bit of gas sand in So uh bottom line in this was |
|
118:06 | interpretation of the seismic was bang on drilling was excellent. We hit four |
|
118:13 | , but two things happened. The is a bit, the sands are |
|
118:18 | bit too thin to be economic. . They weren't pressurized that high and |
|
118:29 | were mixed with nitrogen. So we a pipeline that PG and E pipeline |
|
118:36 | within a kilometer. So, and was prepared to accept our gas and |
|
118:44 | had this radically great geophysical success about four targets beautifully. But the targets |
|
118:53 | full of nitrogen as well as So, so the gas in it |
|
119:02 | compromised, co mingled or mixed with . Now, as you know, |
|
119:08 | nitrogen in the air. So does want nitrogen from your well, mhm |
|
119:15 | . And if they've got their nice gas pipeline and can you put nitrogen |
|
119:20 | their pipeline? No, you have put beautiful natural gas in their |
|
119:28 | So we could have done that. was natural gas there. But you |
|
119:34 | to put a refrigeration unit on So you have to separate the methane |
|
119:40 | the nitrogen sort of like what a of your clients that the business would |
|
119:45 | something like that and you have to the quality of your natural gas |
|
119:53 | which is going to be for some . Like you would make. So |
|
119:57 | we have to guarantee that it's 99% or natural gas. Well that means |
|
120:04 | we looked at it means you have buy a million dollar refrigerator, take |
|
120:08 | natural gas, cool it the nitrogen become liquefied and you can take the |
|
120:18 | but it's too expensive to do. gas again is pretty cheap here and |
|
120:25 | you cannot afford to do all that with natural gas. And so I |
|
120:32 | very happy to get the well logs not retire to a beautiful estate in |
|
120:42 | , which was very hurtful. I thought target four was gonna be |
|
120:48 | lot more exciting based off of the the slide number 44 because it just |
|
120:56 | so big and you know, it uh it probably is that big. |
|
121:15 | when you actually look at the rock , you'll see that introducing just a |
|
121:19 | bit of gas in the brine. you probably saw with Castano's courses, |
|
121:24 | a little bit of gas, like or 34% of gas changes the p |
|
121:30 | velocity a lot. Mhm. So this case you've got sand, we've |
|
121:44 | a little bit of gas here, it's just a little bit mhm. |
|
121:53 | it's probably fairly extensive and so that Jif was probably right, but it |
|
121:59 | wasn't concentrated enough. Yeah, so decision was I did not want to |
|
122:12 | this go actually because the guests we this a few years ago but the |
|
122:18 | was cheap at the time. But feeling was hold on to it. |
|
122:21 | actually did hold on to it for couple of years that leases, but |
|
122:24 | have to pay for the leases every . And so not everybody wants to |
|
122:29 | in and continue paying for this stuff it's not making any money. So |
|
122:34 | a couple of years of paying for and gas prices didn't improve. The |
|
122:39 | was bail. Let's get out of . It was kind of too bad |
|
122:46 | there was gas there. And if prices had doubled, it would be |
|
122:51 | it to build a refrigeration unit. in the end it probably was good |
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122:56 | gas still is not expensive now. that's that. Anyway, that's a |
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123:03 | case. And it was close. was a geophysical success, remarkable success |
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123:08 | 44 targets and they were gassy and were sandy. It just the wrong |
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123:16 | and not enough. Oops. So room for improvement in all this |
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123:23 | Great. Okay, well let's let's 10 and then we'll come back for |
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123:27 | final session. Okay. Okay, . Well, great. Oh |
|
123:47 | Just sent me this that I was about India and I hadn't seen |
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123:57 | He just said it. Uh, here we go. I've met, |
|
124:03 | mentioned this. So here's the the and here's where we're talking about these |
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124:32 | offshore India, all this stuff and have the first couple of tapes I |
|
124:37 | , hadn't seen this before. It came out. It's always nice to |
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124:41 | what you're doing is announced before, know what's going on? Well, |
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124:53 | , that's good news. Okay. just, uh, I just wanted |
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124:57 | see that um, back with us . Um, here's some work for |
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125:05 | from Andrea, paris, you might Andrea, wasn't she our ta for |
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125:14 | ? I believe she was. sorry, wasn't it Her and Zoe |
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125:22 | . Yeah. Okay. So and so, and they're, Andrea's |
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125:30 | wrapping up her PhD right now and need to talk very soon because hopefully |
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125:40 | been working, she's been working full and it's gonna be working this this |
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125:46 | . So, but her stuff is the bacon. So I want to |
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125:50 | this as another example of an unconventional . So in this case we're pretty |
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125:59 | in the shells and the bacon shale something you should be familiar with. |
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126:05 | is one of the biggest in North is producing something like pushing a million |
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126:14 | of oil a day, huge production largely from this block and shale unconventional |
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126:21 | . So this is another one that's important to have a little bit of |
|
126:27 | with. And you said this was North Dakota. Okay. So the |
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126:34 | B A K K. E. the bacon is a huge producer. |
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126:39 | changed the economy of North Dakota and stretches in the neighboring states in the |
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126:48 | , I think in the South If you look at the whole Williston |
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126:53 | . So the bacon, the bacon contains a lot of that. But |
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126:58 | , it's got a very distinctive It's, it's like an oreo |
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127:04 | So just think oreo cookie, I have any trouble. Thank you with |
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127:09 | cookies. I like them a Or even fudge cookies. Dare fudge |
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127:15 | are also good. So we've got crusty stuff on top and then we |
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127:19 | a filling and then crusty bottom. a sense, they're a little bit |
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127:23 | inverse of a, of an oreo . So you can see the, |
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127:31 | we just walk across this again. now let's look at the far left |
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127:40 | and you can see the um the ray log again. Now you can |
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127:52 | the way that Andrea has partitioned She's picked the upper and you can |
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127:59 | the big excursion here, so that's Shelly, that's the upper block in |
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128:09 | and then we go through a very area and then we hit the lower |
|
128:15 | . So these are really the two layers right there. Then we |
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128:24 | we could decompose these into various minerals , Dolomites, shale materials. And |
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128:35 | again we can look at the density as well as the, the ferocity |
|
128:43 | . And we said, we said before that, the porosity of shale |
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128:46 | actually can be pretty high. It's permissible, but it is porous, |
|
128:54 | , there's carriages porosity, there's carriage in it there's organic content. And |
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129:00 | here we can see again that uh the measurement for porosity is fairly high |
|
129:06 | these shales. So lots of potential organic content. No, they're using |
|
129:17 | resistive Itty logs and a few other and some relationships and calibrating those with |
|
129:23 | samples. You can come out with mapping from resistive Itty too total organic |
|
129:32 | . So this is the carriage and the organic composition that's inside the |
|
129:40 | So you can see in our two layers there's very very nice organic |
|
129:49 | So we like that. Then we look at the velocities. So these |
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130:06 | fairly low velocity. You can see p wave, low shear wave |
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130:12 | The acoustic impedance is are fairly And incidentally this intervening area has quite |
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130:19 | velocities, no organic content, virtually porosity. Then we come across to |
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130:37 | water and you can see that the is evaluated as actually having fairly low |
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130:45 | in it. So the hydrogen that's detected is largely oil. And then |
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130:55 | have we have some water in these units. Now we haven't talked about |
|
131:05 | but there's there's something called a brittleness . The brittleness is how breakable the |
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131:13 | is. And that really comes from measurement of the rigidity and the compressibility |
|
131:23 | the the carbonate or the silica So we can actually make a measurement |
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131:30 | how breakable the rock is. And can see that in the shale, |
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131:36 | rigidity, The brittleness index is very . In other words it's just not |
|
131:42 | brittle. These shells are not So the upper shell and this lower |
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131:48 | that have all the goodies in all the organic material are not |
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131:54 | We talked about that. However the between these is quite brittle and it |
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132:07 | have it can have basically glass in or basically sand and some carbonate. |
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132:18 | the sands and the carbonates are quite and can be broken. So the |
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132:24 | character of this is shale a bit hard sand, that shell. So |
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132:50 | do we get at this? What you do now? We're going to |
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132:56 | a horizontal well so we understand the of it right now. Here's the |
|
133:01 | , the upper level of goodies, lower level goodies. And I gotta |
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133:06 | this and here's kind of a rigid between if you had to put a |
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133:14 | well in here then hydraulically fracture, would you do? Um Like where |
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133:29 | I go in at it or? ? Well I mean the shell there's |
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133:44 | mushy if we if we land a and we put a well through here |
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133:53 | we try to break it. It's gonna deform. So this is like |
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134:01 | . And so what I'm gonna do I'm gonna drill in the middle of |
|
134:04 | glass and then break it. Okay then so I'm gonna land in this |
|
134:14 | drill horizontally and then break it and hydraulic fractures in principle are gonna break |
|
134:20 | through both of these levels. So that's pretty much what's done okay. |
|
134:30 | not like this is plastic scene or , it's still rock and it's still |
|
134:33 | and it's still it's still down at ft. So it's it's got some |
|
134:39 | but not that much. So we'll the well in this middle unit drill |
|
134:47 | pressurize it up, break it hydraulically and try to have the fractures go |
|
134:54 | the upper and the lower unit. so we're tapping the resource in both |
|
134:59 | those. Mhm. So that's the in the unconventional, this is really |
|
135:05 | way that it's done. This just to be a very nice signature where |
|
135:09 | got to malleable high T. C. Units that are on either |
|
135:14 | of a very breakable. You're And uh that's really how it's how |
|
135:27 | produced. I'm just gonna quickly see the what's the production in the bacon |
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135:37 | now North Dakota monthly oil production well 10 years ago was half a million |
|
136:07 | a day. But I'm sure it's you just have to have a |
|
136:21 | It's it's it's almost certainly about a . Um If we look at North |
|
136:31 | oil production. Well good thing for time. Okay. And this is |
|
136:56 | than the stuff coming out of west , right? Um You know I'm |
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137:03 | a good point. I'm actually not . I would guess that it's |
|
137:08 | But uh that's a good question. not I'm not sure about that. |
|
137:15 | that's another that's another good question. that will happen fast api gravity of |
|
137:25 | and oil. Well, um good . Here's here's from the north |
|
137:42 | It says that it's actually fairly light up to about 40 degrees A. |
|
137:45 | . I. In fact it's 42 . In fact it's lighter than west |
|
137:57 | . Interesting. Yeah, it's actually beautiful and it's 0.1% sulfur. So |
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138:08 | is arguably better than west texas. that's um that's very nice at least |
|
138:20 | that one little number. I just very beautiful crude oil, very |
|
138:26 | virtually drinkable and low sulfur. So very nice. So once again, |
|
138:38 | what we're trying to do um remotely trying to get density and acoustic impedance |
|
138:45 | is density times velocity. If we these two numbers from our seismic that |
|
138:52 | cross plot what the number is and that's related to all of our log |
|
138:57 | um course studies. So if we an Ai at 25,000 and the density |
|
139:05 | say 2.3. Then we know that in a pretty nice area. So |
|
139:10 | the exploration technique we'd like to do the seismic processing inversions. Get |
|
139:19 | two numbers out. Do all of rock physics from what we know with |
|
139:24 | and then convert Ai and row into T. O. C. Number |
|
139:28 | then put a map out with O. C. And then go |
|
139:38 | . Okay. And uh I was a conference in Galveston's and was just |
|
139:45 | , I was looking out my window the resort and just thinking what what |
|
139:49 | bacon wells are really like. And the basic idea. This was |
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139:57 | here was an image. This was of our inversions. And so this |
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139:59 | something like 4000 ft and we proposed well like this in the bacon. |
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140:08 | this was our our best area that thought combined the characteristics of break |
|
140:16 | brittleness as well as T. C. So here is the well |
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140:20 | we propose through this anomaly. This strictly the seismic inversion. And then |
|
140:24 | at my window, there's the sand the beach and this was about a |
|
140:30 | . And so effectively this is really you're proposing if you're going to drill |
|
140:34 | horizontal well with a 5000 ft reach sand, this is more or less |
|
140:40 | you're doing. So it kind of the help of it to see this |
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140:46 | of scale. Okay, so that is a brief excursion through some |
|
141:04 | We talked about that. We talked a little bit about core and core |
|
141:08 | and then we talked a bunch about and then we ran through quite a |
|
141:15 | cases of logs and you've got some with picking these likes. And then |
|
141:22 | had one little assignment for you to a couple other levels of that, |
|
141:28 | one log sweep. So now I've kind of dropping these ideas in about |
|
141:36 | else does log analysis go. So now we've been thinking more or less |
|
141:40 | petro physicists and log analysts and doing they do to help in the exploration |
|
141:47 | . But now we want to think like geophysicists, exploration ists who are |
|
141:55 | to explore or develop or monitor once as you've seen in other other courses |
|
142:04 | want to go to from the geology the seismic record and then back |
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142:11 | So we imagine we've got some We've drilled a well this is not |
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142:15 | good story, that's a dry Uh but we've got our well log |
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142:21 | from the well log we take the in the impedance impedance that gives us |
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142:27 | reflectivity, we vibrate the surface and we get bounces off this reflectivity. |
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142:37 | modeling is to take a bunch of parameters and construct the seismic response. |
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142:49 | that's kind of the forward problem. inverse problem with the processing problem is |
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142:54 | got and I've shot a survey. got my reflectivity. How do I |
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142:58 | back and make a real geologic So we're always going back and |
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143:05 | And just for you to remember we that the acoustic competing service or |
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143:15 | Here is the density times the seismic . That's A. I. Or |
|
143:31 | the reflectivity. If I have a coming down and I hit this uh |
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143:36 | interface, then there's a certain amount that energy that comes back. And |
|
143:45 | your seismology courses you went through energy and reflectivity. But the very simplest |
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143:52 | of acoustic reflectivity is lower impedance minus impedance over the sum gives us a |
|
144:03 | impedance change and that's it. The impedance changes the reflection or the reflectivity |
|
144:16 | the amount of energy that's returned. the amount of energy that comes back |
|
144:24 | amplitude of the echo is the reflection . And that's just the change in |
|
144:30 | acoustic properties over the sum. So difference over the sun, that's our |
|
144:42 | . So we remember to that from logs we construct a reflectivity log. |
|
144:56 | we imagine that now we have to that. And so we imagine that |
|
144:59 | got a vibration from the surface coming and it hits that reflectivity and it |
|
145:05 | back. So we effectively replace that coefficient with a band limited version or |
|
145:14 | actual shape itself. And then we have our log that was originally in |
|
145:22 | . But if we know the we can change that depth into a |
|
145:30 | and then our shake is in And for every reflection coefficient we just |
|
145:36 | the shake and then add it all to get what would be the response |
|
145:44 | this column. So you remember all stuff. More or less, more |
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145:53 | less. Yeah, there's a there's , there's one key component that that's |
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146:04 | here that most people will generate these size programs but they don't really understand |
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146:12 | the process is to go from depth the log to time because all these |
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146:20 | , as you can see, started in depth and remember our echo is |
|
146:29 | time. So we have to and as the reflections are coming from deeper |
|
146:41 | , they take longer to get So we know that there's some kind |
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146:44 | mon atomic mapping between the depth of interface and the time that we get |
|
146:54 | . So the question is how do , how do we figure out that |
|
147:00 | ? Mhm. And the way it's is very simple. It's strictly from |
|
147:09 | sonic log because the sonic log told how long it takes to go across |
|
147:18 | interval. So we were looking at these logs that were in microseconds per |
|
147:25 | or microseconds per meter, that sonic has told us how long it takes |
|
147:31 | vibration to go across a foot. you can see that we've got the |
|
147:40 | log, which is how long it to go across a foot in |
|
147:45 | So we basically just add that. I've got the well log in depth |
|
147:51 | every foot I know how long it to go across the foot. So |
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147:56 | here I add the number of microseconds . I add a number of microseconds |
|
148:02 | . I add the number of So I've got depth and travel time |
|
148:11 | from adding the cumulative transit time that know from the sonic log and that's |
|
148:19 | you do it. And that gives a depth to time mapping. So |
|
148:27 | with that I can stretch all the logs into time. And I multiply |
|
148:32 | by two because the seismic is not one way it's going down and |
|
148:39 | So to any given depth I've got have the size of going to go |
|
148:44 | to it and then back to the . So I get a mapping from |
|
148:48 | to two way time T. T. And then I changed all |
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148:52 | my well logs into two way So now I've got my well logs |
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149:19 | a time and the vibration of the of the vibe or the dynamite explosions |
|
149:25 | time. So now for every one these reflections or acoustic impedance changes, |
|
149:33 | just add on the wavelet and then all that together. That's going to |
|
149:38 | me the response at the well location a seismic seismic wave and that's what |
|
149:47 | call the synthetic or the simulated or theoretical or the manufactured size my |
|
150:02 | So now I've got a mapping between rock properties in depth and the rock |
|
150:10 | in time and then I shook all . I've got all these bounces coming |
|
150:14 | from everything and that gives me my or my computed size bigger which is |
|
150:22 | now called a synthetic or a manufactured . So once again we're gonna take |
|
150:47 | density login depth, the velocity log depth multiply them together. That gives |
|
150:58 | an impedance log in depth. I'm to stretch that into two way time |
|
151:12 | then add a wave lit for every activity through the process. Convolution. |
|
151:18 | is just replacing this spike with the lit and adding it all up. |
|
151:23 | then I get my final synthetic size . So once again get my logs |
|
152:02 | depth creating impedance log, stretch it time. The change in impedance or |
|
152:11 | impedance is the reflectivity hang a wave on each one of those reflectivity |
|
152:15 | And I would put that's my synthetic program which is my anticipated seismic response |
|
152:23 | that. Well, log geology so was in principle. Now we take |
|
152:45 | real log and this is my real log in time, calculate the change |
|
152:57 | impedance from the impedance. Get my log involve that or put this wave |
|
153:04 | on every one of those points, it all together and here's my anticipated |
|
153:15 | response. So there are a few that that we can see about this |
|
153:43 | one which has more detail the seismic or the well log. Um I |
|
153:55 | like the well log has more but seismic response is more legible. |
|
154:01 | definitely. The, the seismic response been banned limited. It's been an |
|
154:06 | and it's averaged the, the which gives us an average kind of |
|
154:15 | of the well long. There's a more excursions here. This is a |
|
154:25 | average view of the reflectivity and of well lock. Yes, the well |
|
154:32 | has a lot more detail. The is going to capture the very gross |
|
154:40 | of. So if I look at big change here, there's a big |
|
154:48 | in velocity density. Big I come here. I say, yeah, |
|
154:55 | a big change here. So the is definitely feeling this big guy. |
|
155:01 | know, it gets a bit complicated . You can see the seismic as |
|
155:05 | response. It's got a response to decrease. You know, there's a |
|
155:14 | increase here. We can see that a big decrease there. We can |
|
155:18 | that. So the major, the characteristics of the, of the |
|
155:26 | we're capturing that in the seismic, little details can, and I see |
|
155:35 | particular little layer there. Uh, not. So the seismic resolution is |
|
155:47 | less than the than the log. , this simulation is this is what |
|
155:55 | would see from the surface down. is actually what we've seen when |
|
156:00 | when we drill it. So that's synthetic size program. This, this |
|
156:10 | a very important tool for us and is what interpreters rely on to understand |
|
156:16 | sections. So we've got all this going on. We've got maybe some |
|
156:23 | and reports maybe a well or Then we've got and we've shot all |
|
156:28 | seismic and we've processed it. But I've got the seismic wiggles and time |
|
156:33 | the geology and depth. And I to tie those two together. And |
|
156:39 | the job that a lot of people this city do is they're interpreting or |
|
156:44 | and tying this story together, taking these measurements and putting them together into |
|
156:50 | interpreter. Ble story that here's what know about the geology. Here's what |
|
156:57 | know about the rocks. Here's what see from our seismic and here's my |
|
157:03 | of the seismic in terms of the properties and instantly I've interpreted and here's |
|
157:10 | bullseye drill here. And this is you can expect. So that's really |
|
157:18 | what this is about. So we're more and more realistic, this is |
|
157:23 | real log. This is the real . We've stretched the time using the |
|
157:30 | log, Transit times per foot in time. I've convulsing or hung this |
|
157:38 | on every one of these points as by the reflectivity summed it all together |
|
157:43 | the result is this which is really filtered version of this, which is |
|
157:50 | differentiated version of this. Mhm. that's the whole process. Good. |
|
157:58 | so what does that looked like? , we can we can go back |
|
158:06 | my well log. So here's a log, a velocity line. I |
|
158:13 | these together to get my impedance And then I have taking two microseconds |
|
158:22 | foot and created these logs and plotted out in time from the surface. |
|
158:34 | there's still a mapping between the But now this is plotted out in |
|
158:38 | . But for every one of these there's still a depth. But you |
|
158:42 | see that this scale is not This scale is now uniform. But |
|
158:51 | the relationship 600 milliseconds deep is the way travel time to 500 millisecond, |
|
158:58 | m from the surface. So just to sex, I'm just gonna put |
|
159:03 | my my blinds here. It's getting . My work, my workspace faces |
|
159:39 | . And so the sun to bake room. Okay, so what we've |
|
159:51 | is uh this is a classic display there are lots of software vendors who |
|
159:56 | this kind of software and manipulate And so once again we want to |
|
160:04 | this. We have the original logs depth. We took the microseconds per |
|
160:10 | for every foot. And every foot assigned at the two times the microsecond |
|
160:16 | transit time. So effectively stretched these into time that we can involved the |
|
160:23 | with this little wave lit and you see the wave lit. And then |
|
160:27 | out putting this blue synthetic size And then I'm comparing that to actual |
|
160:37 | from a seismic line and that's what do. So here you can see |
|
160:44 | real field seismic in black. And we've taken one of those field seismic |
|
160:52 | traces made it red. And then the synthetic size program which is in |
|
160:58 | . And we can look at the between the synthetic seismograph and blue and |
|
161:03 | real seismic and red. So what you think? Um I mean it's |
|
161:15 | close. The red is of course little bit more like the blue isn't |
|
161:21 | um pronounced I guess like it's like higher amplitudes and the red like aren't |
|
161:30 | high in the blue. But I it's close. So there there are |
|
161:38 | small some small differences. Like in the character is different through the play |
|
161:46 | . The character is pretty good. is a little bit a little bit |
|
161:55 | here. Got this reflector that So that's good. So what I'm |
|
162:04 | interested in the in this particular I'm interested in this area. And |
|
162:08 | the the character matches pretty good. actually theoretical correlation is okay but not |
|
162:15 | . So this is this is a negative indicator. It's pretty hard on |
|
162:19 | . It says it's only 0.7 which probably a little a little harsh. |
|
162:29 | what are we doing with this? the idea here is we've got a |
|
162:33 | drilled, we've done all of our physics. So we understand the, |
|
162:39 | we create the synthetic size program. so now I can understand the surface |
|
162:47 | and that's a big part of So this might be part of a |
|
162:52 | . And I'm gonna pick the time this surface, such as the |
|
162:56 | That's the colony sandstone. So I'm in that and I'm going to take |
|
163:03 | whole line or volume and with this wiggle, I understand that wiggle and |
|
163:10 | believe it because I've seen the well , I know that I know that |
|
163:14 | well logs have these characteristics. I the synthetic size program. I can |
|
163:21 | its character tied to the well logs that character in the synthetic is quite |
|
163:26 | to the character of the real So I kind of believe all this |
|
163:32 | , then I'm going to pick the of this horizon, the colony and |
|
163:39 | look all over the seismic volume to it and look at its character. |
|
163:44 | deep is it doesn't have any structure it. Do the amplitudes get bigger |
|
163:49 | less. So I'm going to look all those characteristics and then try to |
|
163:54 | up with a story for this colony . It looks like it's getting more |
|
164:00 | here, It's less porous here. think I can see the effects of |
|
164:04 | here and not here. And so going to do all these games with |
|
164:09 | , changing the seismic a little changing the well logs a little bit |
|
164:15 | seeing what that does and then trying find areas that might be gas saturated |
|
164:22 | example, or oil saturated in this horizon. And this is a big |
|
164:30 | . There's lots of colony gas around it's uh it's not deep, it's |
|
164:35 | 1300 ft deep. So if we find that again, we can drill |
|
164:40 | and produce it cheaply. And then that's what we're trying to do. |
|
164:46 | that's the role of the the well in helping us understand surface eyes. |
|
164:56 | . So likewise if we went back this guy, this is kind of |
|
165:01 | stuff together again. Let's do a interpretation of these logs. So we've |
|
165:11 | this 10,000 ft. Well now I've you a few little highlights here. |
|
165:24 | we just do our regular interpretation Okay um caliber looks good. Um |
|
165:33 | that top section we have that low and lowest piece. We have some |
|
165:40 | and low radio activity. Um Then go to the reason festivity and we |
|
165:51 | high resistive Itty. Would these be of like no I was gonna say |
|
166:00 | sand because it's like fingers. But , they're definitely stringers because you can |
|
166:10 | that the S. P. And gamma ray oscillate back and forth. |
|
166:16 | it looks like a sand shell And then the resistive Itty is doing |
|
166:24 | little bit likewise. It's oscillating all the place, there are four or |
|
166:28 | strong fingers there. Okay I was say and then when we go to |
|
166:38 | atrocities, the neutron and the Um we would be looking at oil |
|
166:51 | I mean there are some crossovers in . But the way that they're not |
|
166:58 | like that top section. Um I think that that would be oil by |
|
167:02 | carbon. Yeah, the you can that there, there's definitely crossover |
|
167:19 | And so it it's not huge but definitely some. And we can also |
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167:30 | that the delta T. The sonic are getting more slow. So we |
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167:39 | see that there's a bit of a indicator up in the top now, |
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167:44 | towards the bottom. Um it looks the velocities are a little bit |
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167:52 | And I don't see maybe quite the but there's a little bit of |
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167:59 | There's a little bit of crosstalk So that's why I evaluated this is |
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168:04 | some gas and some oil. It's a little gassy at the top. |
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168:11 | expect. You can see a nice right there. So that looks that |
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168:20 | definitely gassy down here in some of other resistive intervals. It's not quite |
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168:29 | obvious that that's pretty close. So might think that as you would imagine |
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168:37 | bit more gas saturated on the bit more oil saturated the bottom. |
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168:43 | the sonic logs are a bit slower type, which says probably gassy. |
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168:54 | . But then as you go a deeper, what happens, what happens |
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168:57 | here as we go deeper? Like we go into that next column Organa |
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169:05 | , Go up a little bit but we go back down so we have |
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169:10 | low gamma. Um S. Log goes way down so that's like |
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169:18 | permissible. Um And then when we to the resistive Itty it's lower |
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169:28 | So high conductivity. So that's indicative that brine. And then when we |
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169:37 | to the density porosity there similar. that's also indicative of the brian. |
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169:47 | love water. And then underneath that see caliper still looks good. Then |
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170:04 | go low gamma. Again low SB still pretty were lower residence activity than |
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170:17 | brine. But it's not as low what we would see up there in |
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170:22 | sand. Yeah when we get below it's it's a bit of a mixed |
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170:30 | . It's sand and shale. There's a good sands down here. But |
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170:38 | can see that they're all pretty Yeah the rock is getting faster so |
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170:51 | kind of pure brine saturated and and course the the processes are getting a |
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171:01 | bit lower so it's getting faster. this is another good example of just |
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171:09 | interpretation. But now when we move to thinking about what would seismic. |
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171:15 | if I was interrogating this from above I was getting echoes. But with |
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171:21 | mixing. And what we're gonna do multiply the density log times the velocity |
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171:28 | and build our impedance which would have lot more character than this. I |
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171:32 | did this by hand. So but general we've got a bit of a |
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171:37 | impedance area here, going into higher back to lower impedance. And if |
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171:47 | just did simple reflectivity, this is negative change of impedance. So I've |
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171:53 | my negative reflectivity. This is a impedance change negative and positive. And |
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172:00 | if I took a short wave I could hang the wave lit on |
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172:08 | one of these guys added together. this is the kind of response that |
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172:13 | would get from seismic. Okay, could I see the four fingers |
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172:21 | No, I can't but I can the top of it. And I |
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172:26 | see a bit of character here that you've got some kind of oscillations going |
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172:31 | here when we hit the brine I can certainly see the top of |
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172:39 | . And I probably can see the of it. So I'm gonna interpret |
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172:43 | trough peak as the top and bottom my grind sand. So that's that's |
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172:51 | I would be looking for. So is the this is the concept of |
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173:01 | synthetic size program and we'll come back that. But now we've again we've |
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173:08 | through the petro physicist lens that logs you've done your analysis to understand a |
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173:18 | about the rock and the poor fill the process. So now we've got |
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173:24 | and now we were set up to to extend that a bit more into |
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173:29 | seismic domain? And the first way we extend it is to simulate through |
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173:38 | these convolutional processes what the seismic would like. And this is a sketch |
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173:44 | what it would look like. Um another case, you can see this |
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173:52 | another real set of logs. So run through the quickly. The same |
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174:02 | . Just tell me about this Sweet and then extend that into what |
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174:07 | seismic response would look like. So don't you why don't you run through |
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174:11 | guys too? Okay. I'm looking section A. Mm. I |
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174:21 | nothing's really going on up there. We have high gamma throughout what's labeled |
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174:28 | um sp There's really no change density being relativity, it's glower no |
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174:46 | Yeah, There's nothing really going on there. Um Once we get into |
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174:52 | , we get low gamma um sp also goes to the left pretty |
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175:03 | Um Let's see, neutron. And the density. So we have the |
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175:09 | that we like. Um going into , it's highly resistive. P wave |
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175:17 | a little bit. Um density also . So that's indicative of gas. |
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175:27 | And then, so then if we the density times the Z. That |
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175:34 | give us. So since they're both , would that be a low, |
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175:41 | if we're multiplying. Wouldn't that make a positive? Uh Well, they're |
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175:49 | both positive numbers and so when we I see okay so it's the numbers |
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175:54 | . Not necessarily. So the density positive. The positive multiplied together. |
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176:00 | gives the impedance they're both positive even they've decreased they're both still positive but |
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176:11 | so no we're not taking them We multiply them together first to get |
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176:14 | impedance and then we'll get the negative the impedance log. Okay Okay so |
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176:24 | yeah so then that multiply that that give us that kind of square sticking |
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176:30 | to the left because they were positive that would give us pharaoh we do |
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176:35 | wave lit that would be going out way. So then when we go |
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176:41 | C. Um gamma is still kind high. No well it's starting it's |
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176:51 | high but it's going the other direction . So it's decreasing from the high |
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176:56 | was in B. Um the I'm sorry low so it was low |
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177:07 | then it's starting to get higher from . But not much but not |
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177:13 | Yeah. Um And then the P. So we're going down and |
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177:23 | . The densities are now switched. that would be so we have less |
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177:40 | . And then and then we look resistive. Itty and the permeability is |
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177:46 | kicking to the left so it's still permeable it's okay so I was looking |
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177:55 | that it's getting less permeable? So not, right okay so it's still |
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178:00 | . Yeah. Okay that that shoot bright pink curve is still it's more |
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178:09 | in the sea. Mhm. Now comes back a little bit but the |
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178:18 | thing is B. C. That's a whole unit that if you |
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178:23 | at the gamma ray as well as sp you can kind of see that |
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178:28 | a whole unit. Yeah. Okay B. C. And D. |
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178:37 | whole unit of sand. Okay there's little changes in it but basically that's |
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178:44 | whole unit. Okay. Okay so so still and see the densities the |
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178:57 | are not crossing over anymore. They crossed the other direction. Festivity were |
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179:02 | high resistive. Itty so happy about . What's the so probably oil. |
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179:15 | And then P. Wave let's see got a little they're increasing so they're |
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179:24 | slower. Well look at the scale see 1000 to 400. So it's |
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179:35 | £2000 as we're going to see is getting faster or slower? The transit |
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179:48 | is getting faster. Well look at at the P. Wave. Look |
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179:54 | the scale up there it's in Oh okay so then it's getting |
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180:09 | Okay but relative to so relative to it's getting would it relative to be |
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180:20 | getting faster. Yes. Okay so faster yes. Okay. Um It's |
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180:34 | dense than B. Was so then it we'll be was, oh I |
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180:47 | reading it the right wrong way so getting it's more dense Cosby was like |
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180:55 | it's a little it's a little more than B. Was. Yeah. |
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180:58 | that make sense with your interpretation so ? Yes. Yeah. We're going |
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181:04 | gas to oil. Yeah. So then when I multiply so that |
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181:19 | Mhm. So if I multiply why would it be then negative right |
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181:28 | that positive that we have for? you said going from B to |
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181:38 | the P wave is getting faster. getting more dense. So the product |
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181:48 | those impedance is higher. Right? . So we plot the impedance |
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181:55 | Guess B. Two C is getting . It's getting higher. Okay so |
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181:59 | why we go the other way. why it's going to the right |
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182:09 | okay. And then when we do wave look don't go in the other |
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182:15 | . Okay so the reflection remember is change as we go deeper. So |
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182:25 | change in Z. Be the change our block blog. This is just |
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182:30 | make it simple. We go into top of B. We're going from |
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182:34 | impedance to lower impedance impedance is are positive. But the change in the |
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182:41 | , the reflectivity is negative. that makes that makes sense. |
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182:45 | It's the change in the appearance, appearance itself multiplying density times velocity is |
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182:51 | . They're all positive. There's never negative density and there's never a negative |
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182:56 | . So they're always positive but the can be negative. Okay that makes |
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183:02 | . That's always like what we're talking numbers. Okay, that makes |
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183:06 | So we've done our little impedance log I just blocked it there simply. |
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183:12 | then moving down the change in the log can be negative or positive. |
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183:16 | our reflectivity. And you can see the simple arrows and then we wave |
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183:22 | on top of that and that gives more or less are synthetic sizing |
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183:28 | Okay, so what I would expect off the top of that sand, |
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183:35 | going deeper from the A. Section be A. Is kind of a |
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183:39 | E. Shelly stuff. Then I into a very clean sand at |
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183:45 | Which has gas, so it's lower and lower velocity. So the impedance |
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183:53 | smaller. The reflectivity is negative because got a negative change. And I'm |
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183:59 | get a trough off the top of . So my seismic is going to |
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184:03 | a nice trough off the top of gas saturated sand. Then just right |
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184:13 | that going from B to C. going into a higher velocity high density |
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184:18 | saturated. Mhm. And I can see that so I can see a |
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184:25 | bounce off that and then not And then at the bottom of |
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184:32 | I get another impedance change and so like to see a positive bounce off |
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184:39 | very simply, that's that's more or the interpretation. This is a real |
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184:46 | . This is a as you can a gas and oil reservoir sitting on |
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184:50 | of the water in a in a water layer. Um simplifying the impedance |
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184:56 | , which we would construct from the and velocity and getting the reflectivity and |
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185:01 | getting the seismic. This is what expect to see. And so I'm |
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185:05 | to go looking through all the seismic try to find that signature. So |
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185:13 | once again tying us into all this . Okay, good. Yeah, |
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185:19 | that's great Stephanie that we got through lot of stuff today. So that |
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185:24 | of wraps up a stab at the physics. The well, logging gets |
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185:30 | into the seismic world. So we're look a little bit more synthetics and |
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185:34 | go into borehole seismic. Okay, . So have to meditate in |
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185:42 | There are lots of, there are of well log sweets. I would |
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185:47 | try a couple of them other areas we haven't, we haven't looked |
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185:52 | If you have any questions about any those logs and doing it. Just |
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185:56 | me a line and I'm here next . So we'll go through, we'll |
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186:04 | have a little quiz friday, like an hour or something. Okay, |
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186:11 | have a little quiz friday and then got saturday to do some more and |
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186:17 | it's just the uh, another wow. Okay. Okay. So |
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186:32 | gonna do in person on friday. yeah, maybe that's maybe that's a |
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186:42 | idea. Um, That's March Yeah. Why don't we do a |
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186:56 | in person session on friday. And then and then the rest will |
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187:02 | just online. Okay man, I think I've taken an in person quiz |
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187:11 | Covid. Well I won't I won't there. Well we'll let you do |
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187:19 | . It'll be just it'll be a short quiz. You can just do |
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187:22 | . It's um and there's no there's ultra time so we'll just it'll be |
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187:29 | a little log exercise. Just exactly what we've done. Yeah, I |
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187:34 | just thinking that I was like, , I don't think I've done it |
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187:36 | a long time. Yeah. Yeah. I know for a lot |
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187:44 | people it's been a long time since even talked to anybody in person. |
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187:51 | , I don't think I've taken an person exam, just like a test |
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187:55 | . I don't think I've taken an person exam since spring of 2020. |
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188:00 | sure I'm sure I can remember We had a birthday party, March |
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188:06 | of 2020 and that was the last that a whole pile of us were |
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188:13 | to get together in person for, know pushing, pushing a year and |
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188:19 | like you there were all kinds of and friends of mine, some were |
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188:24 | of more liberal and we started meeting of us who are a little bit |
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188:27 | adventuresome but many good friends. Didn't anybody basically for almost two years. |
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188:36 | , it's just such a, an time. Yeah, I worked, |
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188:44 | I was still going to work every . But it was very weird cause |
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188:48 | worked with seniors. I worked at senior apartment community and we had to |
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188:53 | like masked up just because they you know, the population that was |
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188:56 | hit the worst. So we had wear PPE and stuff to go to |
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189:00 | and stuff like that. It was . Well that it was really |
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189:06 | you know, in Spades, it , it was really scary, especially |
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189:09 | seniors, really scary. You there was, there was one of |
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189:17 | nursing homes in my home in my because my parents were seniors at the |
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189:22 | and the, you know, covid to the nursing home and I think |
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189:26 | killed two thirds of, you 100 or 200 people in the nursing |
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189:30 | was just horrible. That was just of the worst cases nationwide. But |
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189:39 | , we made it through largely. actually didn't get Covid until last |
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189:50 | I I went through the whole I was just fine. And then |
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189:54 | got Covid in july of 22. I was just like, it was |
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190:02 | like, I was like, I went this whole time getting it |
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190:04 | . I got it. Well, think you waited until the right |
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190:10 | Yeah, my grandmother actually passed away the, I call it the original |
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190:15 | . So she died from Covid back january of 21 um she passed and |
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190:24 | , yeah, we all didn't get until 22. So I'm sorry to |
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190:28 | about your grandmother. But fortunate that the rest kind of toned down |
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190:36 | . Oh yeah, for sure. was sick for like three days and |
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190:39 | I was fine. Yeah. I it in january 22 also and I |
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190:47 | the same way you did. I , wow, I've avoided this whole |
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190:50 | and I wasn't being cocky about it . I mean, I was actually |
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190:54 | of the country when the vaccines came in 2020 and I flew back here |
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190:59 | january 2020 to get that vaccine well, actually, I guess that |
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191:05 | 2020 21. As soon as the was available, 2021 I flew back |
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191:12 | they had the big lineups here and call in and try to get the |
|
191:15 | . And so I was I was happy to have got it because |
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191:20 | everybody just thought, this thing is fatal and we have one chance to |
|
191:27 | was pregnant when the vaccine came out they didn't advise me to get |
|
191:31 | And in the beginning, they said women shouldn't get it. And then |
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191:35 | the end and they're like, you can get it. But I |
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191:38 | already, I was like, what changed between me being able not |
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191:41 | get it and then to get So it was a very weird |
|
191:45 | Well it is and and you know as from a scientist point of |
|
191:51 | I was a bit more tolerant, guess because guess what? Nobody did |
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191:58 | what was going on. It was new virus and none of us had |
|
192:04 | through a pandemic for 100 years. one was the spanish flu. So |
|
192:09 | frankly knew what the hell they were . And the thing is that like |
|
192:16 | , the public wants to know what doing, but that it just wasn't |
|
192:24 | like pregnant women. This vaccine, . R. N. A. |
|
192:29 | were so new and so radical that knew what they were going to do |
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192:37 | people who are not pregnant people who pregnant carrying another life that's rapidly changing |
|
192:44 | them. So, you know, think I'm in the sector that I |
|
192:50 | that this was a miracle that we anything that would help us for |
|
192:56 | but nobody knew what the effects were be. And all of us rolled |
|
193:00 | days. Everybody was scared, everybody's the solidified horror story in their |
|
193:08 | So nobody wanted that. And so thought, you know, it's it's |
|
193:16 | bad that the medical community doesn't really . But um you know, we've |
|
193:20 | drilling wells finding oil and gas and miss all the time. So we |
|
193:25 | do better. Yeah, that's So anyway. Well, I'm glad |
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193:31 | everybody is uh that you and the while we're healthy, in any |
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193:37 | Mhm. Oh good. Okay, , great Stephanie. Uh well we'll |
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193:45 | you friday and I think in person is a good idea. Okay, |
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193:53 | . We'll see you next friday. right, thank you so much. |
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193:58 | have a good rest of the |
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