Clastic depositional systems
1. Course Introduction
2. Sedimentology and Stratigraphy: why do they matter to the Oil Industry?
3. Fluviatile depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
4. Course participants will gain a sound understanding of how the large-scale reservoir architecture and the internal reservoir property variation of a clastic sedimentary deposit are controlled by the combination of its stratigraphic setting and depositional origin. Secondly how this controls fluid flow in subsurface reservoirs. This overview is followed by a review of different fluviatile deposits and their reservoir characteristics. Emphasis is placed on how the macro- and meso-scale reservoir heterogeneity that typifies many fluviatile reservoirs, impacts on recovery efficiency and well numbers.
Clastic depositional systems
1. Participants’ learning points from the previous day
2. Fluviatile depositional systems and reservoir characteristics [Ctnd]
3. Lacustrine depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
4. Deltaic and coastal depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
5. The module on fluviatile reservoirs is concluded with an exercise that integrates seismic, core, log, and production data. Lacustrine systems are commonly important both as reservoirs and as source rock systems. Lacustrine systems are also natural laboratories to illustrate sequence stratigraphic principles due to the rapidity of base-level variations as compared to open marine depositional systems. Lacustrine ‘source rock factories’ are placed in their plate tectonic and climatic settings. Deltaic sedimentation: sediment supply vs wave action vs tidal action as controls on delta type and shape.
Clastic depositional systems
1. Participants’ learning points from the previous day
2. Deltaic and coastal depositional systems and reservoir characteristics [Ctnd]
3. Deepwater mass-flow mechanisms
4. Deepwater depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
5. Sea-floor topography as a key control on deepwater depositional architecture
6. Carbonates vs Clastics – a comparison
7. Reservoir characteristics of deltaic and coastal depositional systems with emphasis on macro- and meso-scale reservoir architecture and internal reservoir property variation. Mass-flow mechanisms [e.g. turbidity currents) in deepwater settings and the resulting depositional systems (e.g. slope channels & basin-floor fans) and the reservoir characteristics of different turbidite deposits. Salt and/or clay diapirism as a key control on sea-floor topography and the effect of that topography on turbidite deposition. Why the biogenic origin of carbonates makes the petrophysical characterisation of carbonate reservoirs more complex than for clastic reservoir rocks, and why this results in much greater uncertainty in reservoir models and volumetric estimates.
Sequence stratigraphy
1. Participants’ learning points from the previous day
2. Sea-level change: the processes and their spatial and temporal scales
3. Sequence stratigraphy: a tool to analyze sedimentary sequences
4. Optional workshop module based on Client data [by prior arrangement]
5. Sea level [=’base level’] variations at different spatial and temporal scales are the key control on how and where sediments accumulate in a basin. A sequence stratigraphic analysis of a sedimentary sequence must therefore be based on a sound understanding of the different processes that drive both relative and eustatic sea-level changes. Use and abuse of the global sea level curve [‘Haq curve’].
6. Sequence stratigraphy and seismic stratigraphy: origin of these tools to analyze sedimentary basin-fills. How ‘High-stand’ and ‘Low-stand’ sea levels affect the deposition of sandy reservoir rocks, shale-rich seals and organic-rich source rocks within a basin. Why clastic deepwater turbidites typically form during a ‘Low-stand’ sea-level, whereas carbonate deepwater turbidites typically form during a ‘High-stand’ sea-level.
Clastic depositional systems
1. Course Introduction
2. Sedimentology and Stratigraphy: why do they matter to the Oil Industry?
3. Fluviatile depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
4. Course participants will gain a sound understanding of how the large-scale reservoir architecture and the internal reservoir property variation of a clastic sedimentary deposit are controlled by the combination of its stratigraphic setting and depositional origin. Secondly how this controls fluid flow in subsurface reservoirs. This overview is followed by a review of different fluviatile deposits and their reservoir characteristics. Emphasis is placed on how the macro- and meso-scale reservoir heterogeneity that typifies many fluviatile reservoirs, impacts on recovery efficiency and well numbers.
Clastic depositional systems
1. Participants’ learning points from the previous day
2. Fluviatile depositional systems and reservoir characteristics [Ctnd]
3. Lacustrine depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
4. Deltaic and coastal depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
5. The module on fluviatile reservoirs is concluded with an exercise that integrates seismic, core, log, and production data. Lacustrine systems are commonly important both as reservoirs and as source rock systems. Lacustrine systems are also natural laboratories to illustrate sequence stratigraphic principles due to the rapidity of base-level variations as compared to open marine depositional systems. Lacustrine ‘source rock factories’ are placed in their plate tectonic and climatic settings. Deltaic sedimentation: sediment supply vs wave action vs tidal action as controls on delta type and shape.
Clastic depositional systems
1. Participants’ learning points from the previous day
2. Deltaic and coastal depositional systems and reservoir characteristics [Ctnd]
3. Deepwater mass-flow mechanisms
4. Deepwater depositional systems and reservoir characteristics
5. Sea-floor topography as a key control on deepwater depositional architecture
6. Carbonates vs Clastics – a comparison
7. Reservoir characteristics of deltaic and coastal depositional systems with emphasis on macro- and meso-scale reservoir architecture and internal reservoir property variation. Mass-flow mechanisms [e.g. turbidity currents) in deepwater settings and the resulting depositional systems (e.g. slope channels & basin-floor fans) and the reservoir characteristics of different turbidite deposits. Salt and/or clay diapirism as a key control on sea-floor topography and the effect of that topography on turbidite deposition. Why the biogenic origin of carbonates makes the petrophysical characterisation of carbonate reservoirs more complex than for clastic reservoir rocks, and why this results in much greater uncertainty in reservoir models and volumetric estimates.
Sequence stratigraphy
1. Participants’ learning points from the previous day
2. Sea-level change: the processes and their spatial and temporal scales
3. Sequence stratigraphy: a tool to analyze sedimentary sequences
4. Optional workshop module based on Client data [by prior arrangement]
5. Sea level [=’base level’] variations at different spatial and temporal scales are the key control on how and where sediments accumulate in a basin. A sequence stratigraphic analysis of a sedimentary sequence must therefore be based on a sound understanding of the different processes that drive both relative and eustatic sea-level changes. Use and abuse of the global sea level curve [‘Haq curve’].
6. Sequence stratigraphy and seismic stratigraphy: origin of these tools to analyze sedimentary basin-fills. How ‘High-stand’ and ‘Low-stand’ sea levels affect the deposition of sandy reservoir rocks, shale-rich seals and organic-rich source rocks within a basin. Why clastic deepwater turbidites typically form during a ‘Low-stand’ sea-level, whereas carbonate deepwater turbidites typically form during a ‘High-stand’ sea-level.