Title of article :
Injection-induced Microseismicity in Colorado Shales
Author/Authors :
S. Talebi ، نويسنده , , T. J. Boone، نويسنده , , J. E. Eastwood ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Imperial Oil Resources Limited uses cyclic steam stimulation to recover oil from their
Cold Lake oil field in Alberta. This operation, in particular situations, can be associated with the failure
of well casings in the Colorado shales above the oil-bearing formation. A number of fluid injection
operations was undertaken at this site and the associated microseismicity was detected using two
three-component geophones and fifteen hydrophones. The purpose of this experiment was to simulate
the occurrence of a casing failure, determine the feasibility of monitoring in a shallow environment, and
characterize the microseismic activity. A calibration survey provided values of 17869108 m:s for
P-wave velocity, 643956 m:s for S-wave velocity and 0.42890.017 for Poisson’s ratio in the shale
formation. Estimates of the quality factor QP were 15 for the horizontal direction and 38 for the vertical
direction, corroborating the evidence of velocity anisotropy. Calibration shots were located to within 10
m of the actual shot points using triangulation and polarization techniques. Several hundred microseismic
events were recorded and 135 events were located. The results showed that microseismic activity was
confined to depths within 10 meters of the injection depth. The experiment clearly established the
feasibility of detecting microseismicity induced by fluid injection rates typical of casing failures in shales
at distances over 100 m.
Keywords :
microseismicity , P- and S-wave velocity , Source location , polarization. , Water injection , attenuation
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics