Abstract

Predicting vertical and lateral facies variations in various depositional environments remains a major challenge in the oil and gas industry because it impacts petroleum system assessments and the associated exploration-risking phase. The use of multidisciplinary constraints (geomorphology, geology, geophysics) in forward stratigraphic models sheds light on the complex interaction of local, regional, and global driving mechanisms that influence sediment transport and deposition along continuously evolving landscapes. In this paper, we develop an integrated statistical approach to examine the sensitivity of forward stratigraphic models in complex salt provinces to several parameters, including water discharge, sedimentary load, grain size and associated diffusion coefficients, and slope. This statistical analysis was applied to the Barremian–Albian sequence of the central Scotian Basin (Canada) and highlights the influence of complex salt kinematics on sediment pathway diversion and accumulation around salt domes and canopies. Forward stratigraphic modeling results point to regions of higher probability of Lower Cretaceous sandy reservoirs. Automating simulation runs significantly reduced the time required to achieve a statistically valid number of simulations and allowed the sensitivity of the model to be evaluated.

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