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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Canada
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Western Canada
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Alberta
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Calgary Alberta (1)
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United States
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Arkansas
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Kern River Field (1)
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commodities
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oil and gas fields (1)
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Canada
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Western Canada
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Alberta
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Calgary Alberta (1)
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dams (1)
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data processing (1)
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engineering geology (1)
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faults (1)
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foundations (1)
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geophysical methods (5)
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ground water (1)
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oil and gas fields (1)
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United States
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Arkansas
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Carroll County Arkansas (1)
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California
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Kern County California
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Kern River Field (1)
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Texas
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Caldwell County Texas (1)
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well-logging (2)
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Introduction to this special section: The future of applied geophysics
Observing and modeling the effects of production infrastructure in electromagnetic surveys
Casing integrity mapping using top-casing electrodes and surface-based electromagnetic fields
Finite-element analysis of top-casing electric source method for imaging hydraulically active fracture zones
Front Matter
Contents
Reservoir Management and Field Life Cycle
Abstract Elements of reservoir management have been practiced for years, particularly if a major expenditure was planned for a field. However, the formalism of reservoir management as a process is a relatively recent concept in the petroleum industry. Wiggins and Startzman (1990) define reservoir management as “that set of operations and decisions by which a reservoir is identified, measured, produced, developed, monitored and evaluated from its discovery through depletion and final abandonment.”
The Role of Integrated Project Teams Applying Innovative Technologies To Improve Production and Recovery
Maximizing the Effectiveness of Integrated Reservoir Studies: Practical Approaches to Improving the Process and Results
The Supporting Technologies
Abstract The application of reservoir-geophysical technology is inherently multidisciplinary, and as discussed in Chapter 1, the concept of integrated asset teams has been transformational for reservoir management. As Pennington notes in his paper in Chapter 1 of this book, the teams are “united by common goals rather than common technologies.” However, reservoir management remains a fundamentally technical endeavor requiring the specialized knowledge of the team’s geologists, geophysicists, and engineers.
Fundamentals of Reservoir Geophysics
Exploration Appraisal
Abstract The use of geophysics for exploration appraisal began as a tool for reservoir definition, description of continuity, and estimation of thickness variations across the prospect. The primary application of seismic data was to define reservoir limits and compartments, and analysis techniques were limited to poststack data. That has been changing slowly but steadily in the past decade. For reservoir appraisal, seismic techniques have expanded to the prestack domain, contributing to the understanding of subtle reservoir variations, including lithology and fluid change. Electromagnetic methods are used to detect hydrocarbons directly at the reservoir scale.