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 BIRTH OF THW DIGITAL ERA A major effort was made in the mid sixties to perfect water saturation
                analysis in shaly sands. Archie's equation was not designed
                for this situation. Many competing methods were proposed, but
                the fallout left the Simandoux equation (about l965) with the
                Waxman-Smits method (l968) holding sway for a zealous few. Most
                of the methods, including Simandoux, suffer from lack of rigor
                or have a physically unsatisfying model. The Waxman-Smits method
                is theoretically acceptable but some of the data needed for the
                equations (such as cation exchange capacity of the rock) cannot
                be obtained from logs reliably. It is difficult and expensive
                to get from measurements on cores of real rocks, especially if
                there are no cores to be found from the zone in question.
 
 Another
                approach is called the dual-water model (or bulk volume water
                method), published by various authors between l968 and l97l. It
                segregates the total amount of water in a formation into two parts
                - that bound to the shale (bound-water) and that in the pore space
                (pore water). The method is currently popularized in most service
                company programs, both in the office and on the computerized logging
                trucks at the wellsite.
 Controversy
                still rages over the best water saturation method and the ultimate
                water saturation equation has yet to be presented. Water
                saturation analysis in shaly sands and porosity determination
                were both being studied in the late sixties. With several independent
                sources of data, and with more unknowns than measurements, a new
                style of analysis was proposed. Instead of solving a fixed
                set of simultaneous equations, various iterative solutions were
                used to minimize the change in one or several computed results. The
                primary goal was to correct for shale, light hydrocarbon effect,
                heavy mineral effect, and to solve for porosity and lithology
                at the same time. Success depended greatly on log data quality
                and on how well the calculation model actually fit the real geology.
                Much work is still being done in this area and new approaches
                appear in journals yearly. 
                
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					 SARABAND Computed Log c.1971                                       CORIBAND Computed
                      Log c.1971 |  These
                models absolutely depended on high powered computers, digital
                data recording (first achieved in l965) and great patience, since
                results did not appear quickly. Weeks or months might be needed
                to get results for even a small group of related wells. This situation
                has improved markedly since 1985. More
                advanced computer programs for carbonate rocks appeared in l97l
                to provide a similar service as was available for the shaly sand
                situation. The goal in this program was automatic hydrocarbon
                correction and mineral identification. The
                best known examples of these programs are Schlumberger's SARABAND
                (superceded by VOLAN and ELAN), CORIBAND, and Dresser Atlas' EPILOG
                products. All these methods are iterative refinements of the crossplot
                or simultaneous equation solutions. During
                the seventies and early eighties, these methods were programmed
                on low cost sophisticated hand calculators. If large volumes of
                data were required, desktop computers with digitizers, plotters 
                and printers could be obtained from several sources. Today, the
                ubiquitous personal computer does the work at a fraction of the
                cost and time. The
                first truly portable stand-alone desktop system that did not require
                connection to a large mainframe computer was LOG/MATE, developed
                by the author and D. W. Curwen in l976. This was 5 years before
                IBM "invented" the PC. It has since been mimicked and
                improved upon by many others, so that a wide range of such systems
                are available. 
                   LOG/MATE, the first commercial desktop log analysis software
			package (1976, left) and META/LOG, the first spreadsheet-based log
			analysis package (1986, right), both developed by the author.
 Timeshare
                systems using computer terminals to larger mainframes or mini-computers
                were first seen in l965, and are still used. Both batch and interactive
                time share systems can be found in many oil companies, service
                companies, and consulting firms. The phrase "time sharing"
                has disappeared from computer lingo but the concept persists with
                local area networks, UNIX servers, and distributed computing. Log
                analysis methods vary from crude to complex and the quality of
                results varies with the knowledge and experience of the analyst.
                The quality and age of input data is always a problem to consider.
                Simpler systems, with a good analyst at the controls, often provide
                better results, because of the personal input and knowledge of
                the analyst. More complex programs tend to do unexpected things
                and are not easy to control, even by expert log analysts. Moving
                the analysis from the office to the wellsite, to speed up decision
                making, has always been a driving force in analysis techniques.
                Of course, all the manual methods described above could be performed
                at the wellsite, using charts and slide rules, and later with
                electronic calculators. 
				 In
                l963, attempts were made to interpret porosity and water saturation
                automatically by recording the so-called moveable oil plot. This
                involved analog processing of log curves to obtain the appropriate
                data. How many readers actually know what an analog computer is? CYBERLOOK Computed Log Analysis c. 1976
 While digital recording of well logs began in l965, early trials
                of digital computation at the wellsite did not begin until l972.
                After this date, the major service companies have almost completely
                replaced all their older analog logging units. This provided both
                log analysis and calibration control by computer. The best
                known analysis examples are Schlumberger's CYBERLOOK and
                Dresser's PROLOG products.
 A
                number of new tools, revised uses of older tools, and significant
                advances in computer processing of log data have been introduced
                in the 1980's, and are gaining rapid acceptance by well operators. Satellite
                transmission of log data from the wellsite to service company
                computer centers superceded the Telecopier and FAX machine in
                many areas, allowing faster decision making at the head office,
                somewhat to the detriment of local autonomy and egos. The
                lithodensity log is an improved density log with reduced statistical
                variations on the density measurement, and a new curve - the photo
                electric capture cross-section curve, better known as the PE curve.
                Its' value depends on the rock lithology and is relatively unaffected
                by porosity and pore fluid type. Therefore, it can be used to
                assist in lithology identification in simultaneous equation solutions. The
                natural gamma ray spectrolog, mentioned earlier, is now also widely
                used to resolve lithology problems, such as radioactive dolomite
                or granite wash formations, or to help define clay types in shale.
                It provides three primary curves - the potassium, thorium and
                uranium curves, which when summed, give the total gamma ray curve.
                These three curves, plus the three porosity curves (density, sonic
                and neutron), and the Pe curve provide seven independent measurements
                of formation properties, which should allow a total of eight lithologic
                properties to be calculated from the data. The
                three usual resistivity curves, the caliper curve(s), and data
                from the electromagnetic propagation log, which is presently being
                used to determine flushed zone water saturation, can be added
                to the list, for a total of 12 or more independent curves. It
                is clear that the solution mechanism is beyond chartbook and calculator
                capabilities. Most popular computer programs have been updated
                to provide specific hard-coded solutions for specific combinations
                of these tools and individual lithologic models. For example,
                Dresser lists eight different open hole and five cased hole programs
                to adapt to the changing times. When
                one considers adding multiple passes of the thermal decay time
                log (pulsed neutron log) for each year of a well's life, the data
                explosion becomes increasingly difficult to cope with. One
                product, called FACIOLOG, by Schlumberger, was an attempt to reduce
                this data overload to a minimum. It provides a detailed electro-facies
                log which, when calibrated to rock sample and core data, can be
                very useful in understanding depositional environments and well
                to well correlations. It can also be presented on a seismic time
                scale to assist in correlating normal seismic data, or vertical
                seismic profiles taken in the same well. Its’ visual appearance
                mimics the type of shading used by geologists while drawing their
                geological sample logs. Unfortunately, such interpretive log displays
                have not received wide acceptance. Single
                well studies as described above lead directly to field and pool
                studies, seismic modeling, mapping, contouring, reservoir modeling
                and simulations which are topics not normally associated with
                well log analysis. Such studies are becoming commonplace, and
                are far more successful when the log data has been properly processed
                for the specific end-use, and integrated with all other geoscience
                disciplines. A
                second approach by Schlumberger has been to create a universal
                log analysis program, in which the log data suite, the lithologic
                model, and the log-rock response equations are provided by the
                user, instead of being hard coded. This product is called GLOBAL
                and can be classed as a linear programming
                solution. It has additional features which make it unique, such
                as a complete set of detailed environmental corrections, and a
                statistical evaluation section which attempts to minimize the
                inconsistency between input data sources and assumptions, and
                the analysis model being used. The uncertainty in each input
                data value is also considered by the program. This approach is
                independent of the log analysis model used which could be
                VOLAN or CORIBAND or any other model supplied by the user. Similar
                software is available now from several sources. Another
                area of advance is in dipmeter analysis, as more sophisticated
                computer programs provide more coherent data for evaluation of
                detailed stratigraphy and permeability direction. This is especially
                practical when combined with a product like FACIOLOG. The
                nuclear magnetic log (sometimes called the unclear magnetic log
                because so few people understand how it really works) is also
                being pursued again for its ability to predict permeability, fluid
                viscosity, clay bound water, and irreducible water saturation. These
                complex and expensive logging tools plus analysis procedures
                have one thing in common - the capacity to improve oil and gas
                production if used properly. In order to reduce dependency on
                imported oil in Europe, USA, and Canada, it is necessary to exert
                this maximum effort on many wells. A minimum well evaluation effort
                is no longer considered a cost saving, but is instead an expensive
                loss of potential reserves. The
                recent years in well logging can be termed the era of digital
                data, giving tool designers and analysts the power of the computer
                to bring to the surface more data of higher quality than ever
                before.
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