Abstract

The Mahu sag slope area, which holds significance as an oil and gas resource, still have some underexplored regions because of structural mismatches, presenting a potential challenge to be properly addressed. To resolve, this study conducts a comprehensive investigation concerning structural characteristics, fault combinations, favorable reservoir distribution, reservoir control factors, and oil-water distribution characteristics within the Triassic Baikouquan formation, evaluating the impact of depositional environments and sedimentary dynamics on reservoir quality. For this purpose, constrained sparse spike inversion and seismic waveform indication inversion were employed to comparatively evaluate oil and gas reservoirs, further integrating petrophysical and geological data with geological modeling to enhance accuracy in complex structural geology and enable high-precision reservoir prediction. The findings elucidated the distribution range of the Baikouquan formation and the location of oil reservoir sand bodies, as exemplified by well B and identified potential hydrocarbon traps, offering valuable insights into reservoir performance. It demonstrated comparatively reliable effects and considerable predictability power of seismic waveform indication inversion. These outcomes provide a strong foundation for future evaluations and multi-layer system deployment in the region by serving as a novel valuable framework for subsequent development activities not only in the Mahu sag but also in similar regions.

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