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00:00 what? And then I'm going to to pull up, okay? Probably

00:10 to share the screen first. Nothing? Yes. Okay.

00:30 I use, um, Google So, uh, everybody let me

00:34 if you can see the slide. ever see it looks good.

00:45 Now, I've lost all my recording . I guess the recorders on there

00:49 are. Okay. Anyway, we're virtual this semester. How do

00:59 folks feel about being virtual? I think in some ways it's convenient

01:04 a lot of people, but I the university is is trying to get

01:12 face to face time. But with rate of covert up high the way

01:16 is right now, lot of folks Yeah. Hang on. I got

01:23 faculty meeting that just popped up on other computer. Yeah, Yeah,

01:35 . Wow. Yeah. And it's dismissing. Yeah, yeah, I

01:51 I got rid of it. Okay. Thank you for getting me

01:55 of faculty meeting. Uh huh. , um, as I was

02:03 you know, it seems like everybody to be adapting really well to virtual

02:07 , and people are doing a lot . I think with them than we

02:09 thought we would do. I, okay, this thing keeps popping

02:16 I'm gonna have Thio. Microsoft teams a nuisance, and I'm trying Thio

02:32 to get rid of it. well, well, I think I'm

02:49 going to turn my computer off. ? Okay, hopefully that did it

03:01 , for spring, it looks like gonna be scheduling for all,

03:06 virtual classes again. Does anybody have problem with that? Don't be shot

03:14 . They have the conveniences, and are. It makes it really easy

03:19 like work around my schedule and So I have to get anywhere.

03:22 other than that e even in the yet? Yeah, I kind of

03:30 really enjoy FaceTime. I like seeing . And we're gonna have AAA log

03:35 that I have to figure out how going to do virtual, But but

03:40 than that, I think we can it, but I think you

03:44 when people get together, I think a little extra magic there. But

03:48 have found during this period of getting together with people online is not

03:55 good, but it za good Second thing I think e o like real

04:01 with people. Yeah, of And and And I think that's why

04:07 have glasses. Yeah, because uh you know, fortunately, doing

04:13 synchronously like everybody's here in class, not like trying to get defensive driving

04:20 something online. It's it's a lot personal. We get to see each

04:25 . And, uh, I think the chat session at the beginning of

04:30 that we had is something that's really for everybody, sort of. And

04:34 think it it gets people interested in geologists in geology rather and and even

04:41 , ammonites or or whatever they might . And so so I think that's

04:49 working out Now. If things somehow , we may be able to start

04:55 face to face. But it's really at this point in time to schedule

05:00 to face classes because we actually have have rooms that have doubled the number

05:06 people that we have. In our . That's not going to be a

05:10 , because we only have 10 students the class and we have a classroom

05:14 fits 24. So if we have go or if we're able to go

05:20 face to face and everybody wanted I would say let's do it.

05:25 , um, at this point in , I don't think any of the

05:30 are gone face to face, except a few of the undergraduate courses in

05:36 spring. So I just wanna let in on that. Another issue about

05:41 semester's. Hopefully next week. I'll , ah, good tentative schedule for

05:48 the spring semester, and I'm gonna up the time slots. I'm going

05:54 set up what courses I think should in those time slots. But if

05:59 doesn't fit a particular professor schedule we , we may switch the classes

06:04 But we won't change the times unless have to. So when you get

06:10 tentative schedule, that should be pretty for your planning purposes and,

06:16 hopefully by if not late next early the week after that, we'll

06:24 the schedule finalized for the spring. , um, if anybody wants to

06:32 in touch with me, I know been trying to get ahold of Joe

06:35 , and we've been kind of missing other, but but if you need

06:40 get a hold of me. um, I have my office numbers

06:46 here, but I'm not gonna be , so send me an email,

06:51 every time I go into the it's kind of emptied out and

06:56 So, uh, there's not a going on there, but I need

06:59 get in there and start doing some work. So I'm gonna be going

07:02 every now and then. So it be possible to meet on campus if

07:06 anybody wants to, uh, for kind of consultation, but send me

07:12 email and we can sort that But I think most of time we

07:15 do everything by email and on the . And if we decide to talk

07:22 the phone, all I need is your phone number, and I'll probably

07:26 you from my cell number. If if we want to come to

07:31 , can we or is that what's the deal with that?

07:34 you can go to campus, and think I'm pretty sure the library is

07:38 , but you have to check under , and, uh, and when

07:45 , uh I think when we get class is we're not gonna have any

07:51 semester with computers. But if we get to a class that needs,

07:56 , the computer lab, I think can accommodate that, um, in

08:03 spring and fall. Excuse me. spring in the summer we actually

08:08 ah, computer class online, and were able to get everybody remote

08:13 which is something we don't normally do a lot of our data, because

08:17 proprietary, and we don't want people it for consulting and that kind of

08:21 . But for the classes, we able to do that for the basin

08:26 course that was taught, I believe the summer. And, uh,

08:30 might have been in the spring So , that that worked out really well

08:34 the spring. And so we'll be to handle that. And that's the

08:39 reason to come in, Uh, again, with the logging exercise and

08:44 the mapping exercise, I'm gonna have dio It would help if we were

08:49 it hands on. But I'll try figure out a way Thio to compensate

08:55 that online and try to give you ZMA back up information as I can

09:00 show you things Hear from from uh, from my home office,

09:08 , by just holding things up like in front of the screen and hopefully

09:12 be able to see something, but lot of it will be,

09:16 it will be in slide so that can see it more clearly.

09:27 Okay. Um so here is basically I put up, So I'm glad

09:34 wants to meet. Um, Let's if I could do something else so

09:43 can read the screen. Okay. were by and large gonna have ah

09:50 of 10 minute breaks, I uh, even though we have these

09:54 class times and especially because we have long class times, I think it's

09:59 important that we take breaks and pause now and then eso that people don't

10:07 real tired and whatnot. And you've been doing this already, but we're

10:11 probably have 10. And maybe in cases, if we have a long

10:15 , will have a 15 minute and then around lunch will probably have

10:19 45 minute break. When we're on . It usually ends up being an

10:24 because it's very hard Thio to go , get lunch and come back and

10:29 than an hour. But I think can do 45 minute breaks. And

10:35 we finished class 15 minutes early because that, like at 4 45 instead

10:40 five PM, that'll be fine, . The schedule for the exam is

10:45 Wednesday, 68 p. M. that's, uh, the Wednesday before

10:53 , and that's on the schedule. if you folks want to move

10:57 let me know because we're doing it and the way I'm going to do

11:00 online exam, at least the way think I'm going to do it right

11:05 , It would be really good if can take it at the same

11:10 But other than that, um, know, we probably could have a

11:15 people taking it different times. And somebody can't make it on the scheduled

11:22 , for example, if we all to do Tuesday, but somebody can't

11:26 it Tuesday, uh, I would that, uh, if one or

11:31 people want to do it a different , we would do it a day

11:35 than a day later. And the being is because Aziz Muchas I trust

11:41 of you and and always assume that got a bunch of ana students.

11:48 of the things that I know for is that if people are being competitive

11:55 , and they take the test they're not going to tell the rest

11:59 the class what was on the because it will really hurt them,

12:02 all of the grades, they're gonna curved. And, uh, don't

12:07 me what the curve is because I know, until I have the

12:11 You can't. You can't justify a until you actually see the data.

12:18 So anyway, that's how I'd like see it. Like if, for

12:22 , the class decides we're going to this on Tuesday and somebody can't do

12:25 Tuesday, then it would be good you could do it on Monday.

12:31 , that makes sense to you. then, um, and then that

12:35 there's less chance of, uh, considering helping out the rest of the

12:42 when they when they haven't been able get advantage of hearing about the the

12:47 ahead of time either, which, the way, I consider academic

12:52 Thanks. Okay, so next Okay. Um Okay, So this

13:05 what we're gonna be doing primarily the week, and, uh, one

13:12 things, uh, I noticed was I have the books listed on my

13:17 , and for some reason, it there. So I haven't told you

13:20 about books yet. And there is good book that's a good companion to

13:25 course. You don't need it, , uh, it's a book that's

13:30 reading whether you use it for the or not. And, uh,

13:34 I'll go over what chapters in that relate to which lectures. And if

13:41 get it, uh, I think might be hard to get new,

13:46 , unfortunately, the second edition, thing came out in, uh,

13:54 and four, and I actually got in 2000 and three because I knew

13:57 authors. But the second edition is out momentarily, as they say these

14:06 , and I don't know exactly when is going to be, but because

14:11 that, if you get a text , you might have to buy a

14:14 one on Amazon for in some you may be able to get in

14:19 library and actually find a pdf that can use for a certain amount of

14:24 . Eso you might want to try . I know the the library carries

14:29 book and in the past, the of students and checked it out.

14:34 think they have more than one but But it is. It is

14:38 book, and I'll get to that a little while and then I'll go

14:41 these other things. Then we're going talk about petroleum is a resource.

14:48 of course I have a lot of , Uh, that are really interested

14:55 this, and it's important. Of , the reason for this is that

15:01 if, uh if we're all gonna looking for oil and gas, we

15:06 to have a good handle on something the economics associated with it, supply

15:13 demand controls in all sorts of And I haven't put this on the

15:19 that I'm going to show you, probably, uh, early next week

15:24 send you ah, short assignment. actually evaluate an aspect of of some

15:32 the narratives that we're hearing in the these days about oil and gas in

15:37 future of oil and gas and that of thing. But I'm going to

15:40 through the lecture and not mention because when I asked you to do

15:47 is gonna be like a three page up where you evaluate a couple of

15:53 and, uh and it's XYZ the time I've done this. But I

15:58 , really would like to upfront, , see an example of of our

16:04 students trying to look at data and up with some sort of conclusion by

16:09 at the data and not looking at people's narratives but actually looking at the

16:16 in saying this is what I just or Amer or Sarah or a Geraldine

16:24 whomever. This is what I think on what I'm looking at, and

16:29 something that I think would be a good exercise to start out with.

16:32 will be a five point exercise. , so so that's gonna be what

16:38 do after the introduction. Then we're talk about a number of terms in

16:43 oil industry and many of you work it. I think all of you

16:46 , actually. So you're gonna know of this stuff, but it's always

16:51 . Thio lay down some ground make sure we're all calling things pretty

16:57 the same thing. And if maybe that'll help sort it out.

17:02 I'm gonna go into this concept of value chain. This is something that

17:10 hammered a lot, uh, in the turn of this century.

17:16 uh, and some companies, spend a lot of time calling things

17:22 practices, and I think they still it best practices. But basically,

17:27 this is about is looking at the stages of Of what we do is

17:36 as we go from the most remote about producing a reservoir to in broad

17:45 to the finest scale in most detailed that we look at when we're trying

17:50 enhance production. And that's kind of that's about. So you kind of

17:55 of petroleum. Geology is being all the reservoir in the elements that contribute

18:02 that reservoir, but the same time spend a lot of energy and money

18:08 to figure things out at different stages the process of actually developing and producing

18:14 reservoir. And that's kind of what value chains all about. Next thing

18:18 going to do is look at some properties of Reservoir rocks. Of

18:24 this is sort of like, more or less, what is it

18:28 sedimentary geology that makes it important in geology? And that's pretty much what

18:37 about. And then, uh, we're gonna look at basins and structure

18:43 a really broad sense and more or how strata graphic and structural architecture er

18:50 a basin impact the types of reservoir is we should be looking for in

18:58 types of configurations that the traps might in these different things and how,

19:04 it say 100,000 ft. We can get an idea of what we should

19:09 looking for when we actually get down the ground and start drilling wells and

19:14 our seismic lines and that sort of . So it's sort of a

19:18 Uh, that might be, more where you are a frontier expiration

19:24 expiration itself, as opposed to more less concerned about production or appraisal.

19:32 when we're in the praise will face of these things come together.

19:38 Okay. Okay. The second uh, way may not get to

19:47 and structure tomorrow, but but we . And if we do, we

19:50 , and we might even get through . Then after that, we'll start

19:55 very not all the logging tools, I think if I look, there's

20:02 some new ones this week I've never of before. It keeps changing,

20:07 we're gonna look at a lot of basic logging tools that geoscientists, especially

20:12 , used to actually figure out what's on and get these single point references

20:19 permeability, porosity, lift lift, and all sorts of things without actually

20:25 a core. And and then there's number of other significant tools that you'll

20:33 in the future. Some of you air from later cohorts. You may

20:37 already gone through a lot of Some of you have already had petro

20:41 and you've looked at it in But basically we're going to be looking

20:45 this in terms of how can we at logs really quickly, sort of

20:49 rapid look rapid scan and figure out I have in a well and where

20:55 can go go from there to get things. And we're looking at some

20:58 the geophysical tools and that sort of . And then at the end of

21:05 day, when we're looking at a sweet of logs, like,

21:09 a gamma and resistive ity and maybe process the logs, we do a

21:15 called Correlation. So we're gonna have correlation exercise. And you see,

21:22 break this up into two. to exercise is one is without by

21:28 strata graphic control, and one is it. I think this time we're

21:32 going to do it once we're gonna the BIOS traffic graphic control upfront,

21:37 more or less help. You kind get everything aligned a little bit better

21:42 front. I find that it's a least for me. It seems educational

21:49 students to try to correlate using the and and the various logs, sweets

21:58 we have to correlate before they actually what the bio strata graphic data can

22:03 to help. But I think to a lot of extra time and everything

22:09 just do this one time with all data instead of not any of the

22:14 . Now, when, uh, when people do correlation exercises and I

22:20 lots of them in textbooks and a of times they have one,

22:27 uh, they put different depths on , and they call them five different

22:33 and you correlate to wells that look alike. And from my perspective,

22:39 teaches you absolutely nothing. So I real logs that I call the logs

22:45 hell. Ah, that are correlated , but they're not easily correlate herbal

22:54 and again, the bio Strat data help. You kind of get things

22:57 line up front, but I'll give a lot of tips as to how

23:03 more people in the past used to this in the present. Now we

23:07 it on a computer and work and it's really hard to get it

23:13 the right scale to do real correlation a computer, because it's either if

23:19 get it a to the scale that need to kind of slip logs and

23:24 out you know what, where do 2 1000 ft sections from each well

23:29 together. Uh, you know, logs air so small you can't really

23:33 much and eso it's it's a really thing to do, and I know

23:39 lot of our past Students do a of these things that other people don't

23:45 because they've learned how to do it hand, and they've seen the value

23:50 it. And so I hope I that you will will. Also,

23:54 not just busy work, but I it's important to really see how to

23:59 things I wanted things. It's really to do is to get on a

24:04 , click a bunch of points on logs and think you have it

24:08 And then only to find out from that actually slipped logs that you're your

24:14 ft off on one well in 150 off on another well and maybe,

24:19 , something even worse. And even , I've had an example where company

24:25 trying to drill a core across the tertiary boundary to help us out as

24:32 . And I told him, You , give me three logs. I'll

24:34 you where it ISS and, uh they said no. We have three

24:39 seismic three D seismic was off by ft, and when they court

24:45 they missed it. And, it doesn't happen all the time.

24:49 a lot of these mistakes that happen because we put too much faith in

24:56 the simple approach to analyzing thing rather actually really try to look and understand

25:01 data. It's very hard to correlate sections unless you've spent some time actually

25:08 at the logs. And and I it's it's kind of hard for people

25:13 imagine that when you can look on computer screen, you can see 25

25:19 in a cross section. Uh, out of scale. You could barely

25:23 , but but it looks pretty and I can click the dots and

25:29 it correlate. But then I've got mess and and I go in and

25:33 my boss and he just starts chuckling me. So, uh, that's

25:37 of why I like like you to this. There's another thing. They're

25:42 , uh, I'm almost obsessive about , Uh, because it really it

25:48 upsets me. One of the easiest to pick a fault is with two

25:54 , and I don't know why, it's really hard to get students these

25:59 to understand that you can pick a based on missing section in one log

26:05 not missing in the other log. to do that, though, you

26:09 to have a good correlation and eso going to try to show you how

26:15 happens. Now again, when you , you look at the text books

26:20 the Tear Bach Tear Pack and the fellow's textbook, Uh, and some

26:26 the other ones. They always give these really simple examples. You

26:30 if you have a beautiful sand and well in a beautiful sand and another

26:35 , and they look exactly the almost like they were carbon copied or

26:43 in a Xerox machine on then you a well in between and that sands

26:48 . Uh, then it's really obvious there's a fault in their on the

26:53 was faulted out. But when you logs that are a little bit more

26:58 to copy, and they have in fact, been copies or reproductions

27:04 the same well, it becomes a bit more complicated, but nevertheless you

27:09 find it and in fact, in is going to kind of tell you

27:13 age. But in the in the seventies, I worked in South Marcelin

27:18 28 and, uh, I was to pick faults in a lot of

27:27 . Uh, that actually separated It's a very big field with probably

27:34 pay layers in it. And, , my task was thio to get

27:42 the perforations up because the production levels dropping off and I knew there was

27:47 lot of oil there. So I my imagination and everything and learn the

27:52 of how to find these faults. I was able to find separate fault

27:56 . But something that's complicating with finding is also looking at strata graphic thinning

28:06 an issue because strata graphic thinning can you think there is a fault when

28:11 isn't really a fault. And but not that complicated because strata graphic thinning

28:17 a larger scale problem in faulting is very localized problem on your log when

28:24 comes to correlation, so It's really simple thing to do. But for

28:28 reason I have a really hard time everybody they could do it Normally.

28:33 happens in the class of 10 Five people will decide. There's no

28:38 you can find a fault by correlating , and the other five will

28:42 Oh, my God, This really well, and I don't know

28:46 but I'm gonna try to get all of you to believe, okay?

28:49 actually, it's not a belief you really do it. Okay,

28:55 and then, uh, at the end of the first half of the

29:00 week, we'll go over sequence strata applications in doing exploration. You just

29:07 a course in this Johnny Bhattacharya is best and a lot of times my

29:13 , actually before his course, so becomes much more relevant. So when

29:19 get to this section, I'll probably primarily on how we use it at

29:24 phases of the value chain. then, the third week you're gonna

29:31 on the Friday a midterm, And we have a test, if I

29:38 a test in the middle of a one of these accelerated classes. It

29:43 to be first thing on Friday because I do at any other time of

29:47 week, people are gonna lose their and be worried about the test.

29:52 you'll come in on Friday. it's Friday, the 13th. It

29:56 turned out that way. But uh, you'll come in on

30:00 You'll get it over with. You'll relaxed. You'll be just really excited

30:05 learning more about these other things, frontier exploration, exploration and exploitation

30:11 And, uh, and then we into the map mapping exercise, and

30:15 we'll have another lecture on on And then, uh, the fourth

30:21 , which is just a Friday will appraisal number three. Then we'll talk

30:27 development and production, and we'll also about unconventional. Resource is now.

30:32 do have a section at the end unconventional Resource is, but I will

30:37 mentioning, uh, you know, of the differences between looking at conventional

30:41 unconventional as we go along through this process of of the Value chain,

30:48 we're looking at the same elements, we're looking at them from different

30:52 and that's really the only difference. I know Ah, lot of people

30:56 when we started looking at unconventional. don't know anything about Shales,

31:01 um, I'll bet you when you everybody here took build to praise

31:07 Yeah, does everybody had Trajan iss positional systems? Okay, maybe half

31:16 you have when you take that um, you get into a lot

31:24 the sediment ology of of deposition, systems. And of course, it

31:30 Shales shells or not, something that don't know about and had to wait

31:37 unconventional came along. Before we knew about them. We did quite often

31:44 the oil industry. Think of them a group of rocks that weren't important

31:49 we were focused on the sands. his geologist, we've always been looking

31:52 the Shales. So in that we will be looking at it as

31:58 go through all of these other Uh, and but then, when

32:04 get to the very last lecture on resource is will spend a little extra

32:08 on some of the special places where are actually doing a lot of work

32:12 unconventional Resource is okay. Here is class book and glue you pronounce this

32:25 ISS and Swarbrick and this thing is to come out in the second

32:30 But but the first editions of fine it was published by Blackwell and I

32:39 know what it is about Blackwell, , um, they have captured They

32:43 a really good book on carbonates and cause and all sorts of other different

32:49 of de positional systems. And something very characteristic of all their books is

32:55 have incredible content, but they have terrible figures. And, uh,

33:02 petroleum geoscience book is no exception of . It's all it's all in black

33:08 white. They don't even have great some of the seismic lines you're trying

33:13 that were in color. Originally, try to figure out what they are

33:17 . I knew Louis and Swarbrick way when, and, uh, and

33:24 guys were pretty good because, I'd have to say that if if

33:31 was milk, they would be able find oil in a field full of

33:39 . If you get what I mean that. In other words, they

33:42 oil where nobody else can, where doesn't even exist, according to most

33:47 . So I really like the logic flow of their book. So if

33:51 could get a copy of it is reading and and it can help you

33:55 Another class reference that I would suggest this is an A P G special

34:01 or something like that. But it's production. Geology Shepherd 2000 and

34:06 When we used to put references up students, we'd we'd list out the

34:10 thing. But these days you can in these things in on Google,

34:16 it'll pop up and you'll see a of the cover and everything. So

34:20 not gonna bother to put the I , p n and all that all

34:23 other type of reference stuff because it's would make my slide look a little

34:29 . Okay, Okay. And of , if you get the book

34:36 these were the chapters that go along the lectures that I have the

34:42 Nothing will be in the book on . But petroleum geology, petroleum in

34:48 is in one terms, and concepts be in all of these chapters.

34:53 rocks in here basins and structure, this is because they're looking at these

34:58 at different levels. I like to through a lot of these basic things

35:02 front so that when we start talking all the different levels in the value

35:07 , uh, people won't be, know, confused about it. If

35:11 if I started here without explaining all this, it might be a

35:16 hard time for you. Keep track what I'm talking about. Okay?

35:21 the grades, Uh, I'm putting 42 30 points on the final exam

35:26 42 30 points in the midterm. , I'm sure this is going to

35:32 everybody and then 30 points for the exercise. Um, down here,

35:39 decided that you're just gonna have one age and correlation you're gonna have one

35:43 logging would be the second one. the first one is gonna going to

35:48 a, um, exercise that I'm to send out next week for you

35:55 look at and consider to write something . I don't want people to stress

35:59 over it. Just, you the key is gonna be having data

36:04 the data and coming up with an that's not my narrative or somebody else's

36:10 , but it's you're evaluation of what data is really trying to tell

36:17 And, uh, and I'll put together. So it'll be the first

36:20 will be, uh, petroleum as resource exercise, then Agent correlation.

36:29 , and excuse me, then the exercise that agent correlation. And then

36:34 have a 15 point exercise or by , you'll map a field. And

36:42 it is with geology on all no matter how Maney wells we

36:48 I don't know what it is. with seismic. Sometimes we have a

36:51 time actually perfectly characterizing anything. So this exercise, what I did was

36:59 I created a three dimensional reservoir, I poked holes in it, and

37:06 holes that I poke into it give tops and bases of sand. They

37:12 us well water contacts that give us cuts and that sort of thing.

37:19 the idea is that hopefully you'll be to map something out that looks like

37:25 the ideal ized reservoir looked like with 15 or so wells that I give

37:33 that actually penetrated it and, one of my students at a capstone

37:40 on this and they surround 2011. think some of the algorithms have gotten

37:47 , but he used four of the software packages at the time,

37:53 uh, almost all of them were between 25 50% in terms of what

37:59 reserves were from poking Ah, hole this ideal ized reservoir. It's not

38:07 , you know, there's a reservoir might have had a shelled out section

38:10 didn't know about it might have had extra faults we didn't see. This

38:15 something I know exactly what it looks poked holes in it, and I

38:20 to let you characterized that reservoir and figure out the volume of it by

38:28 . And while you're doing it, want you to realize that it's been

38:32 with a number of algorithms from four ah computer of routines in sweets and

38:45 they had a hard time getting the answer. And so hopefully you'll find

38:52 interesting. Okay, and so the nature of this course is to

38:59 at many of the concepts in and sometimes this could be a really

39:02 first class because ah, lot of we have in this particular course is

39:09 be, um will be issues or that you're gonna be looking at other

39:15 . Whether you're taking the geological track you're taking the geophysical track, you're

39:22 the geophysical track. Uh, this becomes really important if you're in the

39:28 track. It's important because it kind gives you relevance to some of the

39:33 courses like Trajan Iss de positional systems , deposition all systems or carbonate sediment

39:40 . And the structure, of that you just had. Now,

39:43 , Steve Norick is a really well shell person, and, uh,

39:49 actually gets excited about some of the I get excited about. So there

39:53 be some overlap there when it comes seals in traps and stuff like

40:00 But I'm going to go through my because it's a little bit different

40:04 but it za quite similar. And kind of reinforce? Whatever it was

40:10 said, okay. And, and so again, because everybody is

40:18 industry, you're going to be familiar a lot of this, but I'm

40:21 toe. We're gonna look at it we get through a lot of the

40:25 and what we do with these tools correlation and things like that and we

40:29 going through the value chain, we'll showing you kind of how geologists and

40:37 kind of rationalize things and sort things . We do now have these things

40:45 people have, you know, sort set plans and, uh, sort

40:50 , ah, work plan for everything they want to do. And in

40:54 ways it's kind of like what I call cookbook geology. And I want

40:59 to be a little bit better than with a good workflow, but someone

41:06 can actually look at a geological problem a geophysical problem and figure out what

41:12 is you need because you kind of an idea what that reservoir auto look

41:16 because of the things that you learn on the upper end of the Value

41:20 . And, uh, and how can sort that out, Um,

41:25 the tools that you have, for , a lot of the places that

41:28 done technology and are places where geophysics always work that well, and,

41:34 and that's when you really need And so I'll try to bring some

41:39 those examples up in, uh, the North Sea, for example,

41:44 you're working in the Jurassic or even Cretaceous, Uh, you have to

41:49 through this energy absorbing thing called the , and that makes image in very

41:56 . Unless you have sub sea or ocean bottom seismic and,

42:03 s so that you can get s in there. You get shear wave

42:08 there, not just compression, all . And but having said that,

42:14 , lot of times when we have big resource weaken goto o B

42:17 It's very expensive, and we can those problems. But an awful lot

42:23 done and get started with using geological . And so I'll be focusing a

42:28 on that. But I will mention tools because all of these things work

42:33 together, okay, And here the course objectives, and I'm not going

42:40 read these out to you or because they kind of reflect everything that

42:46 already been saying. Ah, but will look at these processes and these

42:55 that we have different stages of the chain, and I will be giving

42:59 examples of fields that I've actually worked around the world arms. I know

43:08 of you might be working domestically right and just focused on one particular

43:17 But in the course of a quite often you can do a lot

43:21 things. And personally, I've looked problems somewhere around 65 or 70 different

43:29 . And so you can, through a career get a very broad

43:35 on, um, the oil, , systems all over the world rather

43:42 just in one place. Another thing I find out I found out,

43:47 , by doing all this, is when people focus on one particular

43:53 they sort of get into a workflow . It's sort of said and

43:59 it's a little bit cookbook, and think, Well, we all need

44:01 do this, and we all need need to do that. And a

44:05 of times, folks don't stop and , Well, what if we do

44:08 thing that's done in Azerbaijan that we do over here in the Gulf of

44:16 and, uh, when people have outside in different perspectives, and they

44:22 them into a problem. Sometimes, , light goes on and people realized

44:30 tools that we have somewhere else actually for maybe a different reason even better

44:35 a basin where we haven't used them . And so seeing the way things

44:40 and how they're a little bit different one place to the next is also

44:43 really good, um, educational aspect what I try to get across in

44:48 course. Okay, so here I like to be real explicit about

44:58 value chain and to make test questions . I kind of list him like

45:06 . And this is what I'm looking for an answer on a test.

45:12 , there is frontier exploration. Then a separate process or perspective for exploration

45:21 exploitation. And then we find, , where a lot of stuff goes

45:28 and doesn't go on eyes in And then the phase after that is

45:35 and production. So if you follow dancing cursor here, let me put

45:40 on. Okay, so we have have actually six steps in the value

45:54 . There's frontier. There's exploration. exploitation. There's appraisal, there's development

46:05 there's production. And when when I doing all of these different things,

46:12 didn't always put them all together. , ah, when you think about

46:17 and you know a little bit more it when you're doing appraisal, it

46:22 is critical that you focus on what supposed to be doing there, and

46:26 talk about this example in the But, uh, but I have

46:30 example where, uh, a company not yet found about 400 million barrels

46:41 oil with seven wells, and that's they hadn't actually penetrated any one of

46:50 fixed sections where that oil waas basically would be in the phase of

46:56 And when you're in exploration, there's certain way to go about doing that

47:03 of finding that oil field or that . Once you've done this, the

47:09 thing you want to do is appraise discovery and you start looking for the

47:14 of it. But in this particular that I'm not gonna say anymore about

47:19 this point time. Ah, with wells pretty much completely circling one of

47:29 largest fields in the north sea on company missed finding the oil and they

47:38 question whether or not the sand was . And of course, the sand

47:42 there and the sand was absolutely full oil. They drilled seven wells and

47:48 couldn't find anything on their acreage. , uh, basically, I went

47:56 explained to them why this had to there, and I won't go into

48:01 details now. But the key waas the reason why somebody like myself had

48:07 go in and explain something that really have needed have been explained is that

48:11 they were looking for that original the key is to drilling exploration.

48:19 , not an appraisal. Well, you're drilling exploration, well, you're

48:24 for the mother lode. First, want to find out How big can

48:29 thing be? Is it is it minnow or is it a whale?

48:34 , uh, in the case of particular field, they were doing appraisal

48:42 . They were seeing the tapered edge a really fantastic reservoir, which,

48:48 they had discovered it, they would realized there were two reservoirs in the

48:52 blocks to the north and the fault to the south, and they had

48:56 huge field, but they kept hitting boundaries, and they never drilled the

49:02 where the mother lode of that So it's very critical throughout your career

49:07 remember where you are in this value and what you need to be doing

49:12 each one of these steps. um, I'm not gonna read through

49:19 of this, either. But one things that's happened a lot is,

49:27 , and here I mentioned overwhelming new in guiding and planning horizontal wells for

49:32 or conventional plays. What is a ? We're going to talk about what

49:36 play is, but basically a player defined by a number of the petroleum

49:42 elements on. It's something that seems have common elements in a given area

49:50 the area that we call a and that's basically what it is.

49:54 we'll get into more details later when get into into that part of the

50:00 the course on one of the things really bothers me now is that a

50:05 of geologists ah, are primarily, , a steering wells and not really

50:13 ah lot of geological work. And something that you need to think about

50:19 because when you get out of this , you're gonna have a lot of

50:22 and skills if you don't already have that are gonna be applicable to a

50:26 of problems that you may not be asked to work on. But you're

50:31 to need to volunteer information when you , uh, ah, areas of

50:40 some process that's going on, whether in frontier all the way down to

50:44 , that could benefit by using more than just steering a well. And

50:50 thing is, in the past, . This still really goes on in

50:58 companies and sometimes in smaller companies, I think the smaller companies did a

51:03 of frontier. Expiration when it came unconventional is way ahead of everybody

51:11 which is why the smaller companies ended with all the pies in the

51:17 And, uh, but a lot times, ah ah, lot of

51:22 will go into frontier and exploration because we get to that expiration phase,

51:29 really starting to lay out some seismic . We're doing a lot of

51:34 and that becomes really important. Now you're just doing a shale play and

51:39 have a reservoir in a source, or the one in the same

51:45 you know, one of the keys I've got a tank in the

51:48 I need to drill it and get oil out of it anyway. I

51:52 , and by fracking and drilling Uh, that, of course,

51:58 the surface area of your drainage for well, which improves the effect of

52:05 of that well and ability to produce that in the past would not be

52:10 . And so that's a whole different . But again, trying to figure

52:16 where to go for unconventional or unconventional is is still something that can be

52:22 big bucks. And because it's the bucks. Uh, it tends to

52:26 some of the the more sought after . But I started out in

52:33 geology and then and then work my into expiration. And I realized from

52:39 that route was that in production we essentially did appraisal development in production

52:48 and from having that perspective. When went into expiration, I knew a

52:53 bit more about what the handoff had be from people that were doing frontier

52:59 and exploration to turn, uh, thing that we were trying to discover

53:04 that we might have discovered and turn into an extremely valuable asset and s

53:11 again, it's looking at these different from different steps in the process that

53:17 help us make links between the steps make those transitions more effective. Because

53:23 lot of times when people did frontier and they still do, I'm sure

53:29 they came up with these wild We're gonna find two billion barrels

53:33 We're gonna find three billions there we Ah, we ended up with a

53:37 factor of success, a PS say, 25 20%. But I

53:42 so big we got to drill it they just passed it on to

53:46 But if you've considered what somebody, in appraisal or or even exploitation or

53:54 would have to do with that frontier handoff, uh, you're gonna be

53:59 completely different questions, and they're gonna important questions that make that a good

54:04 a profitable handoff or a big red , and you'll be saying I don't

54:09 this is gonna work, folks. this is why So again, I

54:14 the roles of geologists change from position position. But if we look at

54:20 overall expenditure in terms of people, hired is geologist. By and

54:27 most of the money has been spent frontier and especially technology has been frontier

54:35 in the expiration part of fine and and gas. And now with conventional

54:40 we're putting a lot more into appraisal development and actual production of something that

54:47 we've got in our hands. We what it is. How can I

54:51 it better? And I think that's . Why this, uh, approach

54:57 looking at it as a value chain very universal, and it's very applicable

55:03 both unconventional and conventional. Resource is , here's here's one other thing that

55:13 we need thio talk about, and is academic honesty. Again. I'm

55:18 going to read this, but I everybody to read this, um,

55:24 , uh, personally, you I never ever would have thought of

55:28 because when I would take a my idea was always to How can

55:36 learn enough, uh, to make be this Professor, How can I

55:41 out this well enough that I could teach it like the professor. And

55:46 you kind of go in with that , the idea of trying to figure

55:51 the shortcuts and and how to cheat way out of it just kind of

55:56 on DSO I normally think of And it's in graduate school, really

56:02 to figure out what all of this for and what it means and how

56:05 I use it? And of most of you work now, and

56:10 of you, you know, have toe learn this and reasons toe want

56:14 learn this. And, uh, of you will see direct impact at

56:20 job. The, uh sometimes the after you've been in a class in

56:27 of these classes. So, I don't think that's a real issue

56:31 , but But from an academic we kind of have toe tell people

56:36 because of somebody actually cheats. And seems really odd to me. And

56:41 may seem odd to you if somebody is caught cheating The first thing someone

56:48 the administration is going to ask me or any teacher. Ah, did

56:55 tell them they couldn't cheat? And I won't use that word on my

57:01 . But I just want you to that, you know, consider academic

57:07 and just being this course to make a better person. Uh, and

57:14 that's what this is all about, be a better geologist and a better

57:19 . And, uh and I have point this out. Helping someone commit

57:23 dishonesty is in itself also academic In other words, if you know

57:30 about what's going to be on a like if you took the test ahead

57:33 time and you tell somebody else uh then you're just a guilty and s

57:40 I just have to put that out . Uh, I will tell

57:42 when I was teaching in petroleum teaching reservoir characterizations, we had to

57:50 , uh, that actually did And, uh, and the person

57:56 was cheap. Well, one person and the other person benefited, and

58:01 both got punished for it. And was really the worst thing about this

58:06 of thing is that when? When gets caught, Uh, even the

58:10 feels bad about it. You may know that he may be upset,

58:14 he actually feels bad about it, it's not a good thing. So

58:18 try to avoid this, and I want to say anymore. I think

58:21 already said too much. Okay, now we're going to go toe lecture

58:25 and it's It's only been about an here, but I think it might

58:31 a good time to pause. If can figure out how to pause this

58:38 I can pause share now I gotta shut. Is everybody is still

58:54 Uh huh. Yes, yes. me get back here. I'm going

59:06 stop sharing because I'm not seeing my control. Okay, so now I'm

59:20 pause the

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