Affiliation:
1. The University of Texas at Austin, Institute for Geophysics and the Department of Geological Sciences, Austin, Texas, USA..
Abstract
We have evaluated a novel fracture characterization technique using azimuthal amplitude variations (AVAz) present in 3D seismic data, and we implemented it using synthetic and real seismic data targeting the Haynesville Shale. The method we evaluated overcomes many common AVAz limitations and differs from standard AVAz approaches in the following ways: (1) It was explicitly designed to model vertically fractured transverse isotropic (VFTI) media; (2) it can correctly resolve the fracture strike azimuth without a 90° ambiguity and uses a new magnitude-based method that is invariant to the sign of seismic reflectivity [Formula: see text]; and (3) it incorporates advanced inversion techniques to estimate a novel fracture density proxy that responds linearly to crack density. Our method is based on a newly derived relationship that relates seismic reflectivity directly to rock/fracture properties in VFTI media. We validated our method through rigorous testing on more than 400 synthetic seismic data sets. These synthetic tests indicate that our method excels at estimating fracture azimuth and fracture density from surface seismic data with overall success rates around 80%–85% for noisy data and 90%–95% for noise-free data. Applying our method to field data from the Haynesville Shale indicates that the dominant fracture set is oriented at approximately [Formula: see text] relative to geodetic north, i.e., rotated slightly counterclockwise of east–west. We assume a constant azimuth of 80° throughout our relatively small 20 square miles study area, and our method clearly identifies a general area with unusually high fracture density as well as several smaller subzones of dense fracturing. These smaller features appear to be connected by a pervasive large-scale fracture network covering the area with dominant features aligned at roughly parallel and perpendicular to our calculated fracture azimuth. Although we could not directly confirm these fracture characteristics, our results largely agree with previously published information about fracturing in our study area.
Publisher
Society of Exploration Geophysicists
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics
Cited by
23 articles.
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