Unit 9 - Geostatistics Flashcards

1
Q

What is a population ?

A
  • The properties of a reservoir unit for which the geologist or engineer is required to infer (or estimate or guess) values
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2
Q

How do geologists usually estimate the population parameter?

A
  • by an average from a sample
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3
Q

What are the most commonly used descriptive statistics that are determined from a sample?

A
  • Measures of central tendency → this means , the tendency of measurements in a sample to centre around a particular value rather than spread themselves across a range of values
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4
Q

What kind of variables occur in petroleum engineering?

A
  • Category Variables
  • Quantity variables
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5
Q

What are category variables?

A
  • any variables that involve putting individuals into categories

these can be:

  • nominal (e.g. names such as make of bit or formation)
  • ordinal (e.g. a number to represent degrees of bit wear or stratigraphic location)
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6
Q

what is the difference if Ordinal data is ranked or ordered?

A
  • Ranked: e.g., bits ranked by relative condition of wear, low= 1 to high = 7
  • Ordered: e.g., stratigraphic unit 1 is older than stratigraphic unit 2
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7
Q

How can quantity variables be subdivided?

A

have a numerical quantity that can be either discrete (e.g., fossil specimens, numbers of channels) or continuous (e.g., permeability, porosity, etc.)

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8
Q

What are extensive or intensive variables?

A

Extensive variables: Are additive (e.g., volume)

Intensive Variables: e.g. Permeability, which is normally non-additive. The average of two plugs, e.g., a shaley core plug (1mD) and a clean sandstone (1000mD), combined, would depend on how they were combined.

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9
Q

the average permeability depends on what?

A
  • flow conditions
  • flow geometry
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10
Q

What is an effective property?

A
  • property of an equivalent homogeneous medium.
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11
Q

What means Bias? Give examples

A
  • bias is a systematic error in the estimator and may occur due to several reasons:
    1. “Sands” may be sampled more than other lithologies leading to high values for the arithmetic average
    2. It may not be possible to plug very loose sands - often the best reservoir zones - leading to a pessimistic estimate of permeability
    3. Thin low permeability baffles (faults, thin siltstones) may not be sampled leading to optimistic estimates of permeability
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12
Q

What is the median?

A
  • the median of a distribution is equal to the value above and below which equal numbers of samples lie (k50 see below).
  • the median is most easily determined by ranking the data and determining the middle value
  • the median is rather insensitive to the tails of the distribution and, therefore, is often less sensitive to outliers (potential errors).
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13
Q

what is the mode of a distribution?

A
  • the most commonly occurring value
  • if you have a bimodal or multimodal system, a single mode is not appropiate
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14
Q

How do you call a distribution that is not symmetrical?

A
  • skewed distribution
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15
Q

How do you define well testing?

A

as a perforated flowing interval over which permeability is estimated from the analysis of pressure data whilst the well is flowing or once the flow has been stopped.

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16
Q

Measures of permeability and variability can?

A
  • Define the level of heterogeneity
  • Determine the number of samples required
  • Indicate likely recovery process
  • Suggest likely flow performance
17
Q

When do you use the term uniform?

A
  • when a single constant property is used
18
Q

When do you use the term homogeneity?

A
  • low variability → Cv<0.5
19
Q

when do you call something heterogeneous?

A

when 0.5 < Cv < 1.0

20
Q

How do you calculate anisotrophy?

A
  • ratio of vertical to horizontal anisotrophy
21
Q
A