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# 12 - Side Swipe in 2-D Seismic Data and How 3-D is Better

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Manage episode 205729103 series 2162714
Content provided by Investing in Oil and Gas and Mike May. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Investing in Oil and Gas and Mike May or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Mike talks about the phenomenon of "side swipe" in old 2-D seismic data. Mike has located a 50-acre structure in 3-D seismic data that he recently shot. There are two dry holes near the 50-acre structure that did not penetrate the structure. But they were very close! Mike suspects that those two dry holes were drilled on 2-D seismic shot by a previous oil company on this same land 40 years ago - and that they detected the presence of the large structure but they missed it when they drilled those two wells because the technology of the day was 2-D seismic (not 3-D seismic). Mike describes a short-coming of 2-D seismic known as "side swipe" and talks about how we can now surpass that previous limitation of 2-D seismic using modern 3-D seismic - which does not suffer from side swipe. Furthermore, he found an old open hole wireline log from one of these previous nearby dry holes. Having this old log of a nearby dry hole - and the new log he will obtain when he drills the new well on top of the structure - will enable Mike to verify that the 3-D seismic structure map is correct - because the new well log should show the same target formation about 200 feet higher in the new well than it was in the old well! A great place to look for oil! www.investinginoilandgas.com
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16 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 205729103 series 2162714
Content provided by Investing in Oil and Gas and Mike May. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Investing in Oil and Gas and Mike May or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Mike talks about the phenomenon of "side swipe" in old 2-D seismic data. Mike has located a 50-acre structure in 3-D seismic data that he recently shot. There are two dry holes near the 50-acre structure that did not penetrate the structure. But they were very close! Mike suspects that those two dry holes were drilled on 2-D seismic shot by a previous oil company on this same land 40 years ago - and that they detected the presence of the large structure but they missed it when they drilled those two wells because the technology of the day was 2-D seismic (not 3-D seismic). Mike describes a short-coming of 2-D seismic known as "side swipe" and talks about how we can now surpass that previous limitation of 2-D seismic using modern 3-D seismic - which does not suffer from side swipe. Furthermore, he found an old open hole wireline log from one of these previous nearby dry holes. Having this old log of a nearby dry hole - and the new log he will obtain when he drills the new well on top of the structure - will enable Mike to verify that the 3-D seismic structure map is correct - because the new well log should show the same target formation about 200 feet higher in the new well than it was in the old well! A great place to look for oil! www.investinginoilandgas.com
  continue reading

16 episodes

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