1887
25th International Conference and Exhibition – Interpreting the Past, Discovering the Future
  • ISSN: 2202-0586
  • E-ISSN:

Abstract

The broadband Kraken 3D Marine Seismic Survey was acquired during 2013 in the outer Browse Basin exploration permit WA-314-P with the specific goal of assessing risk and volumes at the Elvie prospect. The survey was acquired over a highly rugose sea floor, comprised of deep slump canyons that overlie a steeply prograding Miocene carbonate sequence.

Multiple attempts at processing the seismic data have already been made; including a post-stack time migration (a fast-track volume), pre-stack time and pre-stack depth migration. Conventional processing and pre-stack depth migration approaches were unable to fully resolve short-wavelength velocity anomalies below the sea floor that cause obvious residual imaging problems and impact upon depth conversion and seismic amplitude interpretation. A geomechanical pre-stack depth migration now underway to hopefully address the remaining imaging concerns.

Overall, the Kraken 3D is considered to be a significant improvement over the pre-existing 2D seismic. Interpretation was performed largely in the depth domain, although ties to nearby wells were made in the time domain using legacy 2D and 3D seismic. Mapping has further matured the Elvie prospect, which is a robust 4-way dip closure located on the divide between the Caswell and Seringapatam Sub-basins. The survey provides strong evidence for a thick top seal in the form of deep-marine muds of Miocene age, although there is evidence of minor seepage through a thin flank of the sealing unit. These shallow amplitude indicators, nearby surface seeps and pockmarks near the sea floor provide additional support for a working petroleum system. The Elvie structure appears to be draped by potentially high quality turbidite reservoirs of most-likely Paleocene age.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1071/ASEG2016ab320
2016-12-01
2026-01-19
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

References

  1. Birdus, S., 2008, Restoring velocity variations below seafloor with complex topography by geomechanical modeling. Extended abstracts, 78th Meeting, SEG, Las Vegas.
  2. Blevin, J.E., Struckmeyer, H.I.M., Cathro, D.L., Totterdell, J.M., Boreham, G.J., Romine, K.K., Loutit, T.S. and Sayers, J., 1998. Tectonostratigraphic Framework and Petroleum Systems of the Browse Basin, North West Shelf., In PURCELL, P.G. & R.R. (Eds), The Sedimentary Basins of Western Australia 2: Proceedings of Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia Symposium, Perth, WA, 1998.
  3. Dunne, J., Zengerer, M., and Steel, J., 2015, Integrated Interpretation of Magnetics and Seismic Datasets in the Outer Browse Basin (Australia), AAPG/SEG International Conference & Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia, September 13-16, 2015.
  4. Fruehn, J., Greenwood, J., Valler, V., and Sekulic, D., 2014, Resolving small-scale near-seabed velocity anomalies using non-parametric autopicking and hybrid tomography, CSEG Recorder, Vol. 39 No. 10.
  5. Soubaras, R., and Dowle, R., 2010, Marine Seismic Variable-depth streamer - a broadband marine solution, First Break 28 89-96.
  6. Struckmeyer, H.I.M., Blevin, J.E., Sayers, J., Totterdell, J.M., Baxter, K. and Cathro, D.L., 1998. Structural Evolution of the Browse Basin, North West Shelf; New Concepts from Deep-seismic Data, In PURCELL, P.G. & R.R. (Eds), The Sedimentary Basins of Western Australia 2: Proceedings of Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia Symposium, Perth, WA, 1998.
/content/journals/10.1071/ASEG2016ab320
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error