Abstract

This is the final paper in a series on the 3D multicomponent seismic experiment in Oman. In this experiment a 3D data set was acquired using three‐component geophones and with three source orientations. The data set will subsequently be referred to as the Natih 9C3D data set. We present, for the first time, evidence demonstrating that shear waves are sensitive to fluid type in fractured media. Two observations are examined from the Natih 9C3D data where regions of gas are characterized by slow shear‐wave velocities. One is that the shear‐wave splitting map of the Natih reservoir exhibits much larger splitting values over the gas cap on the reservoir. This increase in splitting results from a decrease in the slow shear‐wave velocity which senses both the fractures and the fracture‐filling fluid. Using a new effective‐medium model, it was possible to generate a splitting map for the reservoir that is corrected for this fluid effect. Secondly, an anomaly was encountered on the shear‐wave data directly above the reservoir. The thick Fiqa shale overburden exhibits a low shear‐wave velocity anomaly that is accompanied by higher shear reflectivity and lower frequency content. No such effects are evident in the conventional P‐wave data. This feature is interpreted as a gas chimney above the reservoir, a conclusion supported by both effective‐medium modelling and the geology.With this new effective‐medium model, we show that introduction of gas into vertically fractured rock appears to decrease the velocity of shear waves (S2), polarized perpendicular to the fracture orientation, whilst leaving the vertical compressional‐wave velocity largely unaffected. This conclusion has direct implications for seismic methods in exploration, appraisal and development of fractured reservoirs and suggests that here we should be utilizing S‐wave data, as well as the conventional P‐wave data, as a direct hydrocarbon indicator.

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