Integrated Logging While Drilling and Wireline Borehole Imaging Applications in Offshore Nile Delta Reservoirs

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dedi Juandi ◽  
Saad Hassan ◽  
Mario Biagi ◽  
Alessandro Fasto ◽  
Mohamed Mohie ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chidi Ndokwu Ndokwu ◽  
Kenneth Amadi ◽  
Victor Okowi ◽  
Kingsley O. Okengwu ◽  
Jones E. Acra

Abstract The quest to gain more knowledge of the subsurface and to reduce uncertainty in the interpretation of subsurface data has been an age-long effort in the oil and gas industry. To achieve this, asset owners use tools with improved resolution, utilize different types of logging tools and integrate the interpretation from these logging tools. This paper will review some projects where data from borehole imaging tools were used to support geosteering decisions and to gain more knowledge of reservoir structure. Borehole images are logs based on the circumferential measurement of a petrophysical parameter along a borehole wall. Logging-while-drilling borehole images can be used for structural, sedimentological and petrophysical analysis. These near-wellbore analyses contribute greatly to the success of most geosteering jobs. Geosteering is a process used in placing high-angled and horizontal wells in subsurface intervals of interest. It involves the use and integration of data from varied sources. This paper will show different scenarios, in different depositional environments, where borehole imaging supported the geosteering process and how geological interpretations from geosteering brought more clarity to borehole imaging analysis. Examples of these will highlight the stratigraphic relationship between geological structures and wellbore trajectory, detection of subsurface structural discontinuities, primary sedimentary structures, and the interpretation of complex geological structures. This paper will broaden our understanding of the applications of borehole imaging and how it integrates with geosteering in achieving oil and gas well objectives.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yassar Goraya ◽  
Ali Saee Alfelasi ◽  
Hocine Khemissa ◽  
Bader Mohamed Al Dhafari ◽  
Muhammad Ashraf ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Keggin ◽  
Walter Rietveld ◽  
Mark Benson ◽  
Ted Manning ◽  
Peter Cook ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 13-61
Author(s):  
Natalia Małecka-Drozd

The 3rd millennium BC appears to be a key period of development of the historical settlement landscape in ancient Egypt. After the unification of the country, the process of disappearance of the predynastic socio-political structures and settlement patterns associated with them significantly accelerated. Old chiefdoms, along with their centres and elites, declined and vanished. On the other hand, new settlements emerging in various parts of the country were often strictly related to the central authorities and formation of the new territorial administration. Not negligible were climatic changes, which influenced the shifting of the ecumene. Although these changes were evolutionary in their nature, some important stages may be recognized. According to data obtained during surveys and excavations, there are a number of sites that were considerably impoverished and/or abandoned before and at the beginning of the Old Kingdom. On the other hand, during the Third and Fourth Dynasties some important Egyptian settlements have emerged in the sources and begun their prosperity. Architectural remains as well as written sources indicate the growing interest of the state in the hierarchy of landscape elements and territorial structure of the country.


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