Abstract

The G oilfield in the southeastern Termit Basin of Niger is characterized by thin-bed beach bar deposits exhibiting strong reservoir heterogeneity and suboptimal production efficiency, necessitating internal structural dissection of the beach bar sand bodies. Employing a well-seismic integration approach, we systematically dissect the architecture of these sand bodies layer by layer to determine their spatial distribution. A classification scheme for beach bar architecture is proposed, with core and log data analysis identifying essential architectural elements and their logging responses. Seismic amplitudes, thin bed delineation, frequency decomposition inversion attributes, and attribute fusion technology delineate the architectural boundaries. Integrating five indicators from four-level architectural recognition at wellbores—shallow lake mudstone appearance, bar margin/beach microfacies occurrence, logging curve morphology differences, beach bar thickness variations, and elevation differences between adjacent bars—enables detailed dissection of the beach bar architecture, corroborated by connectivity analysis. In the study area, beach bar distribution primarily develops in two modes: vertical stacking (accumulation of multiple main bars from different episodes) and isolated (stable mudstone interlayers between main bar sand bodies appearing relatively isolated). This research provides a basis for dissecting beach bar architecture reservoirs under sparse well conditions.

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