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00:00 To answer it. Did you I'm , can you repeat that? Um

00:07 did, how did you make a of this? What did you end

00:10 doing? Oh, I just took screenshot. It was my camera

00:14 Oh, it is off. Um just took a screenshot and send it

00:18 my ipad and then did it that and then I can just send it

00:22 you as a PDF? Ok, , great. That'd be good.

00:28 So please do that and then um got one more little one here for

00:35 just to slam dunk this. ok. Yeah, the song.

00:47 . Let me screenshot this to Yeah. Mhm. Ok. Doctor

07:21 . I sent both. Ok. . Ok. Uh You, so

07:33 let me just check you, you those guys to me? Yes,

07:37 just sent them. Ok, let have a quick boo I'll see if

07:43 got them. Um ok, I , I got the first one.

08:17 . Did, did you send them or were they? Yes,

08:20 they're separate. Ok, I just the second one. Ok, so

08:31 got the first one. Uh I received the second one yet.

08:46 bye. Trust it's on its Uh, let me double check.

09:02 . Yeah, it'll be labeled, , exercise two too good. I

09:12 having a brain part with Archie. , we'll see. Well,

09:18 uh, let's have a look. , we're gonna, we'll, we'll

09:22 them up right now just while it's fresh in our brains. Um,

09:26 haven't received the second one yet. let's, let's go to the first

09:33 . Ok. Ok. That's So let's, let's step through

09:57 Um So here's a, a kind a, a reduced set of logs

10:03 um that are really a rep This isn't, this is um looking

10:11 the logs after the fact. So of the, they're simplified a little

10:16 . So we go through and just a scan at the whole area.

10:22 what you would do is just do partially done is go look at the

10:26 of interest and you can see that uh some pretty, pretty definitive character

10:31 in all the different logs. They're showing some nice excursions and some nice

10:37 . So you can see that the A unit is sort of above

10:41 would guess the area of interest. that's uh and then we go into

10:48 which is showing some excursions that we've kind of a thicker unit C and

10:52 a huge unit D E F as by the uh gamma especially. And

10:59 we go beneath the area of G, I don't know why I

11:03 B E F G. I wanted D E F. I don't know

11:06 I put G instead of D Sorry, here's number one.

11:12 Well, well, uh I'll, have a close look at what you

11:17 done after. Well, we'll just through this and you can, you

11:19 kind of see, you can um as you see fit here. Um

11:25 which intervals? We, we said was the sands shell section. So

11:30 intervals are sandstones? Oh, I B so b Yeah. Um And

11:41 I wasn't sure about d just because kind of like there's the kind of

11:47 that slow slope. Um but I put E N F, OK.

11:55 , um it's, it's a trending and we talked about that a little

12:03 that in a sense you could have something like um uh channel and the

12:11 might be shifting. We just drove through it as you know, from

12:15 graphic concepts, the, as the shifts, you're in a sense,

12:20 going from a sandy area to a area as this channel shifts we're just

12:25 through. So what we see, do see in the top which you're

12:29 pointing out that um That around 80 . Yeah, this is, this

12:38 what our Strat for friends would probably a finding upward sequence. In other

12:44 , it's getting more shay. And could be because again, this channel

12:51 whatever it is is shifting and then lucky through time and then shifted.

12:56 we're going from the sand might still over here. But now we,

13:00 the channel shifted, it's getting more or it could be that this particular

13:07 , the um the tectonics are depositing and more clay rich materials. So

13:17 would say in general, we would this probably a block and where that's

13:22 to be um emphasized. So D F is probably a block. Uh

13:29 it is changing. It's obviously getting shay as you go to the

13:35 However, it's not completely shay because see that it's got um some,

13:43 porosity. Mhm So, but we'll get there. So um uh

13:49 would say B D E F but right, D is a transitional

13:58 OK. So D is uh and could calculate it if we went over

14:04 if, let me just see if can get my little uh um

14:16 uh I'll try to get my Are going. OK. There we

14:41 . So we're looking at this whole . It, it looks like to

14:46 primarily one kind of unit, but right up here, it's changing.

14:51 if we were to pick our sand and here the gamma, we've got

14:54 from 20 to 100. So if pick our sand line, it might

14:58 this is beautiful sand might be, , say 30 20 here and 100

15:08 . So the pure sand line would 30. So we call that 100%

15:14 and then the pure shale line is 80. So there's 50 units and

15:22 the top were, we're probably something we were a little bit screwed.

15:30 not right at full shale here, we're about a third the way

15:36 So up here, that number is there's 20, there's 40, it's

15:42 around 45 And we, so it's . So that's something like about 30%

15:51 . It's still about 70% sand. it's definitely getting shali but I would

15:58 probably call it a sand. This is for instruction, not grading

16:06 uh I know, I, I know why I quit g because I

16:09 it's d so I don't know, don't know what happened there.

16:13 That was a, that was a thing. So, um, so

16:17 going down and so I'm gonna say just on the basis and the other

16:20 is that obviously the S P we said not shale, that's that

16:24 . And then when we look at whole mask, we're seeing that that

16:27 uh you know, it's a hydrocarbon on top of a water or a

16:31 . So that's kind of our classic saturated sound. So then what kind

16:40 gas flus like b well, what you thinking b I was thinking b

16:47 of the resistivity. Um I was that it's brine, it's Brian.

16:53 low resistivity. The uh the pros ran pros agree. That's our slam

17:01 for bright low resistivity agreement here. much change in the Sonic. And

17:09 got all the other reasons to hold . So it's Brine and D I

17:17 . Yeah, this is just a crossover. So this is our classic

17:23 cast and E down here, I E and F being Brian. So

17:30 are, that's our, that's our I really go to conclusion here.

17:38 a little bit of stuff happening in that but we know it's low

17:45 Both units are low resistivity. So , we just can't make that

17:50 we can't make that into oil. then these guys agree. The prologue

17:56 . So we're inclined to say that's saturated uh that's a brain saturated

18:04 The Sonic Log does show a couple interesting things. So it's, it's

18:14 . There's a little, little bit gas in there. Mhm But maybe

18:21 little bit because you can see the change is just a little, little

18:25 . So there might be just a . So we can see there's a

18:28 , little bit of a crossover But um so I don't know,

18:32 there might be uh actually we could this, we could calculate um just

18:39 that very simple Archie's Law. We calculate this value over this value and

18:45 resistivity and probably find that there's a or two of gas in there.

18:52 just that little bit of gas really down the velocity. Mhm.

19:00 there might be just a teeny bit , uh, for peta physicals

19:05 yes, we could, we could it and find that there's a little

19:07 of gas in there. Um, economic interest, that's not gonna be

19:12 interesting because we just, We're probably interested in 98% brine. OK.

19:22 we got that one. Um If could choose and perforate one of the

19:26 , which, which one do you the most d uh definitely d that's

19:30 baby. Um Then, so that's gonna be our main pay,

19:34 pay zone. And then here's Archie's that says if we can find a

19:42 that we're gonna assume is one mythology sand. In this case, we're

19:47 assume that this is one mythology, we can take that 100% saturated,

19:52 is the bottom part over the And that's gonna give us our saturation

19:56 water. So if we take which is from our resistivity scale about

20:08 English or yeah, .25 or And then this guy is way up

20:20 I did 12 because it's in Uh yeah, we could take

20:26 So that's, that's optimistic. So say something like .3 over 12

20:35 then the square root of that So that's gonna be like 16%.

20:50 . So say somewhere around uh Mhm Uh so 16% brine. And

21:04 so our hydrocarbon is 84, around . So it's good that one wrong

21:11 I couldn't remember. I put 0.1 whatever reason because I couldn't remember like

21:17 the R R knot was. Is just like when the log starts,

21:22 , I, that's the one I a brain part on. I couldn't

21:24 what the R knot was. But I remember it's gonna be like where

21:28 line is. OK. Yeah. knot is 100% saturation. And so

21:34 interpretation here is that again, this unit is sandy and we're assuming that

21:42 the bottom according to our logs That 100% saturated and that 100% saturation has

21:49 resistivity value of um .28 or say , somewhere around there. So that's

22:01 or not. OK. And then come up here and yes, that

22:12 10. And um You know, could maybe take 12 That gives us

22:34 . So um the saturation of water 16%. Hydrocarbon is 84%. But

22:45 to make sure that we want to sure that you understand this. So

22:48 the, the, the picture here D E F is more or less

22:58 sand unit, the bottom part is with brine E and F for sides

23:10 the brine. And we said, we want to get really detailed,

23:16 can see that E might have a gas in it because if I look

23:20 the, the neutron density overlay, bang on at the bottom. So

23:25 telling me that's probably a perfectly sand with 100% brine right there. So

23:33 is, looks to be perfectly 100% saturated. Its resistivity is very

23:40 Uh We know that it's porous and and everything from our S P and

23:44 gaming. So that is our 100% sand. Now, we look to

23:52 out what's the resistivity of that 100% saturated sand? And we've gone

23:57 We've said it's around point 25. , I'm coming up here. We've

24:07 all this looks like it's still Brian I'm not getting very much resistivity.

24:17 that's just for fun. Say we see uh a Sonic log drop.

24:24 this, see this Sonic log gets lot slower. Plus we see there's

24:29 little, little, little shift or over here. So that suggests to

24:36 that there might be a little bit gas in there. But why don't

24:40 just try this? I haven't done before. Let's just try it.

24:44 say we had .25 there. what's the resistivity above here? An

24:51 um about Maybe like .3 eight. , it's getting less because this,

25:02 line is .4. So I'm gonna say .35 or something. OK.

25:09 we have .25, divided by What do you get for a number

25:23 ? So if we're really pushing this little bit, What's the uh saturated

25:29 ? I've got 100% here, partial here, like maybe .33 or

25:39 And if I use my little what's the, what's the saturation?

25:48 So, so what, what that gonna be? Zero point You said

25:57 over 35. Well, we're using 100% saturated number. What did you

26:04 before for that? 0.25. Yeah then divide that by the 35.

26:14 , 35. So 0.25 divided by three And then take the square root

26:26 that. So 84.5. So we point uh .25 over .35 Uh zero

26:47 yeah, 0.25 divided by 0.35 14. Take the square root of

26:58 . Yep, 84.5. What? What uh that's gonna be the,

27:05 brine. So then 100 -84.5. 15.5% Hydrocarbon. Yeah. Well,

27:16 know what, when we got picky this um there's some gas in

27:23 Mhm. So there's 15% gas. that, that makes sense to us

27:33 again, there's very little kick on resistivity. This kind of shows us

27:38 you do have to be picky. didn't see very much kick in the

27:42 . Right. Mhm. We we see a little bit on the

27:49 crossover. The blue is just a bit off the red, right?

27:55 we see a fair amount on on the Sonic log. it gets

28:00 , quite a bit slower. So is a pretty strong indicator that there's

28:05 gas saturation here. And if we back to your um fluid substitution

28:15 I'm sure you would find that if put 15% gas in, in the

28:23 , that it drops the velocity a . So that's interesting. But then

28:31 go back up to the uh D this is just the full on

28:36 So we're, we're trending up a bit. We've got a little bit

28:39 gas in here and then boom, just flat give it. What

28:44 what was our calculation? 80 84% up here, 85% gas up

28:52 Uh the bucket. It's interesting. sonic log doesn't care that much.

28:56 put 15% and it does certain amount put in another 70% gas. It

29:02 change this very much. It certainly all the other logs. Well,

29:07 the other ones, but it doesn't the velocity that much. That's why

29:11 hard in the Gulf of Mexico to fizz gas, which is uneconomic from

29:18 really beautiful Boomer gas, which is using P wave data load.

29:25 So we've been through that a little now. Uh the shale volume in

29:31 B. So we for the shale , we've set our sand line,

29:44 . Mhm. Which is very right. That here, Which is

29:54 around 30. And if I come to B and I took an average

30:00 B what would the average gamma be B? Um So when I first

30:07 it, I used the S P and I just redid it using the

30:10 log. Um So I did Um Just because because that's 20 and

30:21 that's 40. Yeah, it's So I did like around 35 and

30:25 I did -30 and then I did . So I got 10%.

30:33 I would, I would say somewhere that I would, so we

30:36 we set our Pure Sand line at , then we come up here.

30:45 you could pick this differently but I , we're averaging, I would just

30:48 what 40, OK. And you pick this differently. I'd say our

30:57 shale is around 60. OK? , our pure sale is around 80

31:03 . So really we had from 30 80. So we had 50

31:07 Mhm 50 divisions between sand and And then I said there was uh

31:13 like 10 divisions, So 10/50 would 20% shale. OK. So the

31:24 thing here is to, to know concept, Let's do another one.

31:32 once again, we're gonna set the line and around 30 according to our

31:36 , gamb is going for 20 to . So if we Set our sand

31:42 , say around 30 And then our line, we're gonna set at say

31:52 . So we've got 50 units to with. Why don't you do another

31:56 ? Tell me at the top of D unit like right up here.

32:01 , what's the because we talked about , what's the shali is there?

32:06 We did that calculation um did not we said it was gonna be like

32:26 a third of The Sandstone. So averaged that. Um so that's a

32:37 , 40. So we could average at about good. So could we

33:00 that maybe around 40? What? ? Which 40? No, I'm

33:09 like in, in general. So set up the equation. So

33:16 I would, I would just say you, what you said, we

33:20 that the sand line was gonna be uh a gamma value of 30.

33:25 said the shale line was at Mhm Then what's your pick here?

33:30 value is your pick here? because like averages between like 60 to is

33:39 like 30? Let's take below the lines because the green line were saying

33:44 were saying that this is a unit we're saying that that the D unit

33:48 really below that green line. So then like Let's see,

33:57 so 45-25. So like 30 40 35. Well, what's the

34:11 right here? Can you see my ? Yeah, so that would that's

34:14 30 is it, are you in middle of the 20 and 40 or

34:19 you on the 40? So here's our, here's our gamma ray scale

34:24 20 to 100. Mhm. So with that line right there is

34:31 Yeah, this line right here is . Yeah. So this these values

34:37 about 50 Yeah, - 50. Given that these values are 45,

34:47 say what's the percentage stand right About 50%? Well, I would

35:02 cal you you better write it down the calculation. Oh I thought you

35:06 just like me was like looking at . OK. So if I use

35:12 so it'd be 50 -30. So 22/5 So 40%. Yeah.

35:29 I'm sorry I thought you asked me what the first like what the value

35:33 were using to plug into the I don't know like OK.

35:37 that's OK. So we're just trying figure out more or less what's the

35:42 is just doing some mental aerobics with or some just picking this stuff so

35:45 you get secure with it. for sure. And uh so at

35:50 talk, we talked about that Is that a pure sand?

35:54 it's not. It's actually, it's about 40% shale. And so that's

35:59 dirty sand maybe. And, but the other hand, we uh our

36:05 logs tell us it's still pretty So, so once again,

36:10 the uh the important thing here is know this, just this general

36:17 we're gonna set us a sand a shale line and then whatever excursion

36:21 between those two, that's what we're call our percent shale or percent

36:25 And so that's the shale volume uh . So just to hammer it at

36:44 depth right here with my pointer, the, what's the, and this

36:49 in unit G, what's the percentage there person in sand will be um

37:00 see. So that line is 60, 60%. Yeah.

37:18 So that case 60%. So we're kind of picking this as a

37:23 . But is that a pure shall no, it's getting that way,

37:30 it's not there yet. So you see that the environment is kind of

37:34 here, whatever was happening, tectonic around there, it's starting to get

37:41 and more curse. So it looks it's raining a bunch more and

37:44 it's getting sandier then all of a something major has happened, you

37:49 a river cut through or, or was a completely different event where all

37:54 a sudden we've got all this sand it was getting sandier. So something

37:58 happening. Mhm OK. So now next question is that this just takes

38:08 little bit longer. But the we wily time average uh equation said that

38:17 slowness of the rock was equal to porosity times the fluid slowness plus one

38:24 the porosity times the matrix slowness. that was the, and so we

38:31 just plug, you know, normally have a table with the, the

38:36 of the, the fluid. And know that that's brine. So what's

38:41 , what's the density of brine Uh was that 2.1? So the

38:50 just of the brine, I'm kind jumping here but the density of brine

38:56 the fluid. Oh It's um I , I don't remember what's the density

39:09 water? 11 and then brine is or more dense than water. It's

39:20 . Yeah. So in fact, you, 02.28, yes, it's

39:33 that much more dense. So it's , it's still water. Brian's pretty

39:37 water. OK. So you're thinking is one 1.0 g per C

39:46 So that's just standard water. Brine a bunch of salt dissolved in

39:50 So it's just a little bit So it's 1.1 g per C

39:54 oh, ok. So, brine still water basically. But it's just

40:00 salty water And it's about 10% So, how you can remember

40:13 Maybe. Have you ever, have you swam in the ocean?

40:18 float better or worse in the ocean in a freshwater pool? You float

40:23 . You float better. Why is ? Because of the density?

40:28 it's, it's a little bit, a little bit denser and it's not

40:31 much denser. It's only a few denser. But if you go to

40:35 Dead Sea in Jordan, the, , that site, the biblical

40:42 you can go to the Dead Sea it's extremely salty because it's below sea

40:47 . Everything drains into it. It very, very salty and it's really

40:50 . So, the water evaporates and can float in the dead sea and

40:53 float and you can read a book there. It's so dense and you're

40:59 buoyant because we're kind of mostly Our body. So, you float

41:05 it. So, bride itself is 10% more dense. And so that

41:10 floats everything. Mhm. So, , you can kind of think of

41:15 as an iceberg in water that fresh floats on saltwater and, and it

41:27 . Ok. So that's, that's of, um, but in any

41:34 , the, uh, so uh, the porosity that we determined

41:39 the sonic is, we used Wiley's . This is a very simple model

41:44 the uh the transit time through the is equal to the porosity times the

41:48 velocity plus the one minus the porosity the matrix. Likewise, with the

41:55 um with the density log, we the blic density is the porosity times

42:01 fluid plus one minus the porosity times matrix density. So the equation has

42:05 same form one using transit times or and the other using density.

42:15 and then we just manipulate those equations define porosity from those obser observations.

42:23 that's, that's that guy. Any there or no? OK. Um

42:35 then just to heap more grief on , we did another one. The

42:44 is that you're so sick of this you can just look at it and

42:46 know, immediately what the answer That's the goal. So we look

42:51 this guy and it's got the same again. So what do, what

42:59 you recognize here in general? Um the, the low gamma through that

43:07 . But then we have the oh I'm so frustrated with myself because

43:18 I didn't do well. Um you that low resistivity right there. So

43:23 that would be Brian sitting on top um Well, no, I did

43:36 it right. Oh My God. That's high resistivity right there.

43:39 yeah. No, that's oil sitting top of something, Brian.

43:47 So again, you don't have to this all at once you, you

43:51 be really, really simple minded and step through this stuff, especially at

43:58 , you know, you don't, don't start skiing double black diamonds with

44:01 on a 45 degree slope first and you, you want to pick your

44:05 through those moguls and uh and not off them too hard. So

44:10 we're looking through here. First of , the overall character is, there's

44:14 much happening too much as far as S P is concerned and the gamma

44:21 a little bit more chatter, but idea. So we're thinking of an

44:26 unit that's kind of homogeneous, lower . And then I've got this anomaly

44:32 the middle and we're always thinking there a reason these guys spent money to

44:36 this stuff. Mhm So they're looking some kind of anomaly. So we

44:42 that we've got a clean interval in . It's also permeable and I come

44:47 and I think, wow, there's classic signature in the resistivity, high

44:51 over low resistivity. So that tells immediately hydrocarbon over brine probably. Now

44:59 gonna go through and look at and think, oh and there's a little

45:03 lower velocities, the sonic log is slower or longer and then my neutron

45:14 my density are overlying pretty closely. that tells me that this bottom part

45:27 probably Briny. Mhm. The top is hydrocarbon. I don't really see

45:41 crossover here. So I exclusion it be oil. Mhm. Uh,

45:56 , the Sonic log again, tells that the velocity is getting a bit

46:01 . So that's, that's a little interesting. And it probably, again

46:08 us that it's a slightly more complicated . It's oil but yet,

46:17 it probably has a little bit of in it and the, um,

46:22 oil is affecting the rock a little differently than, than brine. And

46:27 , we kind of expect that again, um, oil has a

46:34 density. What was the density of ? Again? Less than water?

46:42 than water? Uh, certainly, less than Brian. It, like

46:50 or something. Perfect. You got . That's, that's our 32 degree

46:57 oil which we know and love and even when you don't think about

47:03 you're starting to get the numbers, is good because that's what you

47:08 that all of a sudden that number to you and you don't know where

47:10 came from, but it came to . So that's, that's what we

47:14 . I just realized because when we the results at work, like all

47:18 our S R OS and like the residual oil and the sulfur crude

47:22 it's like, I was like, a second, all of those are

47:24 in the eighth. I was like . Yeah. Well, and

47:29 that's bang on. That's why, , that's great to attach something from

47:34 else that, you know, and , first of all is great because

47:40 the basis of intelligence, intelligence is wiring in different stuff. It's the

47:45 in your brain. That's big part it. And then, uh And

47:50 you're confident of that because you maybe work you've seen that number about 1000

47:54 and you say, look at, know that this number is .86.

48:01 , oh, that carries over to because that's the density that we're interested

48:09 . Now again, that's, that's of a nice, like we've talked

48:11 oil is very, but that's, a nice middle value of oil.

48:16 very close to West Texas intermediate. that's all good. OK. So

48:28 I think you're getting the hang of of these logs and there, there's

48:31 lot to um there are a lot different blogs, but I would say

48:40 in my opinion, I think in ways for reservoirs log is the most

48:47 thing to understand because they, there's , gives us seismic measurements and it

48:55 us an area and everything, which all great. We love it,

48:59 it doesn't tell you everything about the . It gives you a geometry,

49:03 a Strat gray. But with you've got all these different measurements.

49:08 got nuclear measurements, electrical measurements, measurements. Um So we've got so

49:17 more measurements to tell us about the and we're getting right at the rock

49:23 pretty directly. So I think it's important to understand these log responses because

49:32 really tell us all the different things the, um, about the rock

49:35 its fluids. Great. Ok. questions about some of the,

49:56 any, anything about the logs? , no, not right now.

50:04 , let's, let's take a quick . Stephanie and then, uh,

50:09 back. It's, uh, 2 . Let's see, uh, at

50:14 . Ok. All right. See shortly. Ok, great. Welcome

50:22 here. We be good, Um, ok, we both got

50:34 , our shirts on. So that's , yeah, I was thinking

50:41 we could have gotten to the university but uh we hadn't really planned

50:44 So, uh I didn't know whether were able to get down or

50:50 but I'm glad we, because when messaged me, I was leaving work

50:56 I was like, oh my I'm gonna have to go all the

50:58 home, change my pants and then to the university because I didn't know

51:03 was just gonna head up there and he messaged me. I was

51:05 oh, thank goodness because that was be the craziest drive of my

51:08 Ok. Yeah. Yeah, we , we don't really want to have

51:12 do that. I do it periodically and I think, oh man,

51:17 know, I was trying to get to Katie or something for a meeting

51:21 you have to go mental and I hate that is bad and you

51:26 want to do that unless you have . Um good. Well,

51:30 let's just quickly review this to make we have this uh this concept because

51:34 moving now into the seismic. And synthetic seismo gram is the um is

51:43 intermediary. It's the link between our properties and everything we understand about core

51:48 well logs and it's our link from geology to the seismic response. So

51:58 , the uh the measurements, the that we are thinking about this is

52:02 most of the exploration in the oil is really done with seismic. And

52:11 we have to understand what is the telling us and how do I get

52:16 to the rocks? Because ultimately, produced is a fluid from a rock

52:20 depth. And that's not exactly what seismic tells us. And so we

52:23 to understand how to put this stuff . So we just on the slide

52:28 , you can see the uh from to seismology. Um We imagine that

52:33 got are uh just a cross section the schematic diagram of, of the

52:41 of the earth. And we've drilled well, what's the symbol again?

52:48 you remember what that symbol is? doesn't that mean like open or

53:01 Yeah, more or less it means dry hole. It means that you

53:05 looking, you were looking for gas oil, you didn't find anything.

53:09 so yeah, this is, this open your bank account and pay for

53:17 . So yeah, it, it's open in a sense, it's

53:20 dry hole. So that's very But um this is just uh

53:26 Fortunately. So if we look at well log though, we could imagine

53:31 , that there are a bunch of well logs. And if we multiply

53:35 , so the sonic log velocity and density together we get an impedance

53:40 And then the change in the impedance as we go deeper from point to

53:44 . So can we imagine that each of these is a value? And

53:51 the reflectivity is the change in the as we go deeper. So that's

53:56 we defined it. It's the fractional across an interface. So explicitly,

54:13 imagine, and we imagine that every from a log defines a little

54:19 So the log values are at say foot, every foot has a

54:25 And we imagine that that's a Now a bunch of those layers might

54:29 the same rock because we just output log at whatever the log started and

54:34 . So, but each one of one of those one ft layers or

54:40 ft points in the on the log be significant. So we remember that

54:46 the logs are output at around one interval. That's that's the data point

54:52 . On our logs and we're going compute the impedance at every one of

54:58 log points. So something like every foot is going to give us

55:03 impedance. Now, I've got an log and if I look down that's

55:10 , I could say, well, the change between P I and P

55:14 plus one or the next depths And then just look at the difference

55:20 those properties as I go deeper, difference of in pens I plus one

55:30 I, that's just the change over sum. So this is the fractional

55:34 change, it's really half the fractional change. So that in very simple

55:40 , the reflectivity is a derivative, derivative of the impedance or it's just

55:47 the, how is the impedance changing I go down the well? And

55:51 the reflectivity and that's the amount of that's gonna get bounced back by uh

55:59 vibration that goes into the earth. if I had, if I had

56:07 pulse that was very, very high broadband, actually the seism coming back

56:13 look like this, but I can't a powerful enough impulse, high enough

56:24 because the earth absorbs all that energy like if you scream happily at someone

56:34 sound energy gets absorbed. So maybe the room, they can certainly hear

56:39 , but in uh spring, they can't hear you. Although believe it

56:48 not, there are screaming contests to who can be heard at the biggest

56:53 and I forget what the numbers but some people can scream and be

56:58 about a mile away. Oh my . So uh we know that we

57:09 transmit those high frequencies. And so so we can only transmit kind of

57:13 lower frequency that will propagate through the and not attenuate. So because of

57:18 effectively, when I put in a frequency on the surface that chirp or

57:24 character is reflected by every one of . And that's where we get the

57:30 result that every one of those reflection sends back the input signal, but

57:40 does it. So we have to them all together and that gives us

57:42 seismic tree. Right? Yes. . So remember that now what it

57:54 like uh going to a real So suppose I multiply density times

57:59 I get this say uh impedance And then for every one of these

58:06 points and layers, I take the between the above and the below scale

58:11 , that gives me the reflectivity. is actually just a, it's just

58:18 a well log we've constructed a new log. This is a reflectivity well

58:24 and, and that's what it it actually is a, just like

58:27 impedance log is a constructed log reflecting rock properties. The difference in the

58:35 is a a real well log. reflectivity, but that's a well,

58:40 to make it relevant to seismic. have to say, well, what

58:45 seismic does is puts a band limited into the earth. You've told me

58:49 principle, every layer how it could . And that's great. Now I

58:54 in this guy and this is what does reflect when I sum that all

59:00 . So this is what I And the important thing is that when

59:04 got this seismic and sometimes I can my little pointers. Sometimes I

59:16 we see the seismic and blue on right. And now each one of

59:20 wiggles, we can take it back the left and see what caused that

59:27 . Now, it's hard because the wiggle is an average. It's a

59:32 , it's the result of summing and the activity. So if there's a

59:39 happening, the activity, it kind gets jumbled up and looks uh maybe

59:44 bit different in the seismic and that's way it is. That's our seismic

59:48 . That's what we get. So we more um realistically what people in

60:00 industry are all doing is it's usually in two ways. There's a well

60:09 been drilled someplace usually on the basis two D or 3D seismic. You

60:15 in, you drilled well. And that's all good. And then we've

60:20 all the log analysis, all the physics, all the horizon from the

60:25 here. So say these uh logs the right? You, you can't

60:34 my pointer, can you? I can see your mouse.

60:38 you can. Oh OK. good, good. Um OK.

60:44 you can see that the logs in and the right, we've um there's

60:50 of character in here. We multiplied density times the velocity to get the

60:57 and then took the difference of the created a reflectivity and then convolved out

61:03 the wavelet which was the seismic um , either the vibe or dynamite.

61:10 looks like this. And then we our synthetic seism gram in blue.

61:18 then I've gotten real seismic in And so our interpreter job is to

61:27 take that seismic section and compare it the synthetic and then annotate the seismic

61:36 with what those wiggles mean. And done. So you can see some

61:44 these uh horizons. So the horizons picked on the well logs and from

61:51 driller. So we can see there's funny things like B F S which

61:56 mean something bad, but it actually the base of fish scales. So

62:04 fish scale is uh is a marine and still got fishes in it.

62:11 you can actually see the uh the fossils in it. So that's just

62:15 shale there. And then you go , you can see that there.

62:18 colony is pick colony sandstone, the sands, those are all just horizon

62:23 in this particular area. OK. you can see those going from the

62:30 extending right through. We've got a correlation with the blue synthetic seism gram

62:37 the red and black real seismic. this is an indication that,

62:43 this stuff almost looks like it Now, there's, there's one thing

62:55 been baked into this, that is immediately obvious but is really important.

63:05 that's that the logs, as we , are measured in depth, we

63:10 in depth. And so they all measured in depth and we've got this

63:14 vertical depth from the surface. So our log deaths. Now, what

63:24 really done is we've converted those depths time and we talked about this very

63:31 . And why are we doing that ? Because the seismic section is not

63:35 in time of the echoes. So um as we know, we,

63:52 blasted, we whack the surface and the energy went down and it was

63:56 off all these reflection layers and then sampled it, we listened in

64:01 So the reflections, the echoes are time. So our whole seismic section

64:05 went around, we did that every we got this big volume or

64:09 And that picture is also is of in time. So that's the black

64:15 and it's, it's native value. recorded value is in time. And

64:22 , and it's two way time because takes energy, you've gotta go from

64:26 surface down to the horizon and So that's what two way timings it

64:31 down to the horizon or down to layer and back. So that's not

64:41 in the raw form. The log not showing that in raw form,

64:46 log is showing properties and depth. we have to really convert the log

64:52 , it squeeze it do whatever we to do to make the log look

64:57 it's in time. So that's really mapping depth into two way type.

65:09 there are, there's the first way we're going to do that. So

65:17 mentioned, we have, we have Sonic log. So the, the

65:22 really important aspect of the sonic log to provide a mapping from depth to

65:32 . So the sonic log is, output in transit time. So we've

65:37 the Sonic log in in depth and go back to one and see if

65:42 can find one someplace. Let's let just try to find a Sonic

66:03 It's in time. How about this ? No, I fixed all these

66:23 uh into velocity. OK. here's, Let's find an easier

66:36 What was the unit on this Oh I, I've made these olive

67:01 . Um Where's one that's in the ? Well, here, here's actually

67:19 . It's just hard to read. uh we've got, we've got our

67:27 log in slowness or delta T. this is, this is just a

67:32 weird again, we've got this in which we know and understand. And

67:36 we've got a measurement of the time a foot, the delta P or

67:43 a meter. So once again, got a measurement of the uh

67:50 at a depth. I know the across that depth because that's what my

67:56 log is output, right? So can imagine if I've got this interval

68:03 I know the time across it, interval, I know the time across

68:07 this interval, then I just sum of those times together. So all

68:13 have to do is take the uh per foot. Here, it takes

68:21 long to go across a foot, microseconds per foot here, it takes

68:24 long to go across that foot, that there. And you can see

68:28 now I get depth and by summing of those microseconds per foot, I

68:33 a time across that interval. So summing the Sonic log, I get

68:41 depth to time map. So uh we can do is let me

69:19 uh I never use, well, very weird. It's kind of offset

69:30 my uh Well, we can imagine um you can imagine that we have

69:39 here. We have time here and I'm going to sum all the

69:49 And so now I've got depth and and I've got a mapping from depth

69:58 time. So let's go back to we were. So that's how we

70:25 it. So, uh in this , let's just kind of see if

70:29 can draw that. We have, have the original. This is,

70:42 is very weird. My pointer is one point and then the line comes

70:45 at another point. Well, we our, our depth on the uh

70:58 are in depth here and then by all the microseconds per foot, I

71:04 from this depth to this time. so I just stretch, using that

71:23 , I just stretch everything to And as it turns out, and

71:40 can calculate this A very standard velocity most sediments is somewhere around 2000

71:51 That's a standard P wave velocity for near near surface. When we get

71:57 the carbonates, we go 45 6000 per second. But in the plastic

72:01 in the shallow section for 1000 m something, we're going to have 2000

72:05 per second. So if the say is down 1000 m And the velocity

72:26 2000 m/s. How long does it for me to get my reflection?

72:36 little pulse at the surface goes 1000 m comes back 1000 m and

72:41 velocity is 2000 m per second. it just be one second?

72:48 OK. So here's a little uh of guide in the near surface,

72:55 generally know velocities are somewhere around So If the reflector is at 1000

73:04 how long does it take a game get my reflection? One second,

73:09 is how many milliseconds point? So many milliseconds in a second? Isn't

73:23 ? 1000? Yeah. So it'd .1. No. Oh, just

73:33 or two. So if I was plotting in the scale, I could

73:37 one second or how many milliseconds in same scale? Just 1000.

73:45 That I was like, I don't how to say this number.

73:48 So 1000 milliseconds by definition is one where we're going is that If I

73:56 a well log and I had a interface at 1000 m depth, then

74:03 where should I see that interface in ? So I've got an interface at

74:10 m depth. I've got a standard surface. If I whack the

74:15 when's the echo gonna come back a ? Yeah, 1000 milliseconds. So

74:22 the quick, here's the quick look that you can amaze all of your

74:27 and petrology and everybody else friends, slaps a section down and it's a

74:32 section in time and it says 1200 and all the engineers on everybody looks

74:36 says, what the hell is And you say, well, it's

74:39 around 1200 m deep. Oh, do you know? I guess we

74:43 need a geophysicist here. Hm. so there's a there's a little mapping

74:51 easy for a standard near surface that time we see in a seismic section

74:58 milliseconds is approximately the depth in So anywhere around here, the velocity

75:18 the near surface around here down on 1000 m is somewhere around 2000 m

75:25 2nd, 7000 ft per second. the sediments around here are something like

75:30 . They're, they're kind of loosely plastic sediments. So if you slap

75:36 section on my desk and I could a reflection at 1000 milliseconds or one

75:43 , I'd immediately tell you that's around m deep because we know that

75:51 the, the geology around here is similar and that um most of it

75:58 somewhat less consolidated plastic. OK. um that's just a little device.

76:16 , if I'm looking through salt or it's carbon in the surface or I'm

76:20 the Middle East or some other all bets are off, the velocity

76:23 different. So if, if I in the Middle East and it was

76:28 carbonate rate to the surface, which about three times as fast then,

76:33 I saw a reflection at one 100 say 1000 milliseconds, one second

76:40 goes three times as fast. It three times as far. So that's

76:43 be at 3000 m, not, 1000 m, but for around

76:49 for most plastic stuff, that's just little thing so that you can do

76:53 fast. Now, if you look the slide here and we're looking at

76:58 near surface, this is a plastic . So the time is in

77:05 So I've got 600 milliseconds. When you guess? How deep do you

77:09 that is approximately at 600 milliseconds? . So 600. So it should

77:19 somewhere around 600 m deep. if we go across, we

77:23 well, it's just over 500 m , but we were in the

77:28 it's not 2000 m deep. And this is not perfectly 2000 m meter

77:34 second, but we got pretty So I said that 600 milliseconds two

77:40 time was approximately 600 m deep. , it's 5 20. So

77:47 I got close now to be Obviously, we're gonna be different.

77:51 just to get you in the game . When somebody puts a picture in

77:54 of you, it's also a way QC yourself. So when I'm looking

78:00 data all the time, I'm trying second guess my opinion and make sure

78:05 got the units right or try to if something's messed up. And so

78:10 is just one of the things that cross check. So once again,

78:17 in this case, we've got our from depth on the right to time

78:23 the left. And now my interpretation shifting all to time. I've converted

78:27 my logs into a uniformly sampled And most geophysicists do their first blush

78:34 interpretation in time because that's the way size my kids and we paid,

78:41 , we paid for all this So we've got to interpret it.

78:46 . And the way we're going to it is first blush through comparing the

78:52 in time. I can just take logs and just compare them. And

78:56 I know what seismic is, I kind of say, well, here's

79:00 positive impedance change that should give rise a positive reflectivity. And I go

79:07 here and sure enough, there's a black positive spike. So after a

79:13 I don't even need the synthetic seism . I can kind of do this

79:16 my mind and say, OK, an impedance increase here. That should

79:21 a a big black spike. there it is or there's an impedance

79:31 here. I expect a trough. if I go across here, the

79:35 area, I see a trophy in . So we're just manipulating these logs

79:44 our mind. But if I want see the true seismic response because it

79:47 will surprise us because when I convolve this stuff, when I low past

79:52 , it, it can look a bit different. So I do that

79:55 then directly compare the blue synthetic to red, which is just a repeat

80:01 one of the black traces. So we go. OK. That makes

80:12 . So now let's, let's think that was kind of a one D

80:17 synthetic seo gram. And that's the thing that everybody is gonna do to

80:21 seismic two D or 3D. But we're gonna look at this a little

80:26 more detail and think of, exactly what causes that seismic response.

80:35 we imagine that we built a velocity density model and then I've set off

80:39 shot in the middle of it. , I'm gonna look at how the

80:41 propagate. And so we can imagine set up a shot and the wave

80:50 to go down into the earth. we could get as complicated as we

81:00 , you know, in this we've just got our simple P wave

81:03 down into the earth and there's also kind of shear wave afterward and there's

81:11 kind of direct wave between them, this is uh in depth and

81:17 So this is just um as you see the wave propagate in the

81:25 we could measure what's the vertical particle or we could measure what's the horizontal

81:32 particle motion inside the earth. when we, if there's an interface

81:38 here, then the P wave is bounce back some of it's gonna

81:46 So here's the P wave bouncing back the interface here is it's propagating,

81:51 transmitted as we would see the vertical and the horizontal motion So once

82:00 we've gone, there's an interface at m depth. So the P wave

82:08 gonna go down. Sugar wave is go down, then it hits it

82:15 wave bounces back and transmits through the wave bounces back and also transmits

82:24 I can look at the vertical motion the horizontal motion. Now, even

82:31 the simple case with uh with the here, the energy has gone

82:36 it's transmitted through, it's reflected that reflects off the surface and comes down

82:42 . And so in pretty short you get a real mass, everything

82:47 shaking, it's a bowl full of and that's true. And so that's

82:54 surface sizer processing tries to disentangle and a picture out of all this

82:59 And unfortunately, the primary reflection, first reflection is the biggest. So

83:07 helps us, these reflections off the are multi paths or multi poles and

83:17 confuse the story. But, but real, so we in surface seismic

83:31 , we're gonna just uh have a of different techniques to get rid of

83:37 . OK. So that's what we is really happening in the earth.

83:40 if I can drill a hole in , I will see these waves pass

83:46 the and that's where we're going because , if we process the surface that's

83:52 surface seismic, but that's a different of your courses. Yeah, if

83:57 put receivers in the well here then a borehole measurement and that's a borehole

84:04 or a vertical seismic profile or an situ seismology. And that's for

84:14 But we can also think of this different way if I had receivers on

84:19 surface. Now I can plot what each of those receivers on the surface

84:27 from that previous wave propagation or that modeling. And now we can see

84:35 the strictly on the surface, there's wave that propagates across the surface.

84:41 we see that here it takes longer get there the farther I go

84:44 that's the direct arrival, there's a , of course, the rail wave

84:49 bound to the surface that's got a elliptical motion. That's this guy coming

84:56 , takes longer to get to further . And then of course, we've

85:00 the reflections coming up different subsurface. we can see that that's that cool

85:07 here and then there's p and there's wave and there's pure sheer. So

85:14 got all these different wave types now in offset and time. OK.

85:25 we've, we've looked at, um looked at different concepts of how the

85:42 are bouncing around and now let's go the well, and we'll start to

86:09 stuff inside the well. So I laughing that this is a friend of

86:18 daughter and she's now in 2nd Year . So this was a while

86:27 So your little one will soon be university, believe it or not

86:33 Yeah, I know. But when look at her this, she's

86:39 I guess, 21 years old and a lot of her own opinions

86:49 So we're looking at, uh, we're, we've talked a little bit

86:54 the logs, we understand the the rock properties. We've also talked

86:58 , about, um, getting a in the surface and the waves propagate

87:04 the, in the surface, the and bounce back. We're gonna move

87:11 uh borehole seismic because we now need tie our well logs to the most

87:18 surface seismic methods which are seismic. we, we were looking at one

87:27 to link the log properties to the that's by a simulation which is good

87:32 synthetic seism grams. You can see they work pretty well. But there

87:37 a lot of aspects that uh need too because the synthetic seism gram is

87:42 real seismic data. And there are lot of assumptions in it. So

87:48 would like to get a real seismic between the rock properties and circum

87:57 And that's what the V S P whole size was used for. And

88:01 are different names BS PB Seismic in , meaning inside seismology. Well,

88:10 Moral geophysics and then a former student mine, uh Sam's son published this

88:18 on borehole seismic BS P in If Utah is there, he could

88:24 read the title are you there? guess. So you when you read

88:33 title in Chinese, yeah, just from Chinese, it's called. So

88:46 the three dimension two component, both math of the V S P master

88:52 its application. Perfect. Thank Thank you. OK, so uh

89:00 , you can see here um uh the name of the method in

89:07 So that's kind of fun. Uh are, there are a number

89:11 of books again on V S Uh This is probably the most recent

89:19 . So there hasn't been anything out about 10 years on V S P

89:25 I'm aware of. But, I would say that this is one

89:30 published a long time ago when I a graduate actually just after grad school

89:36 I was trying to find a copy it because it was published way a

89:40 time ago and I was really happy see that somebody was selling a copy

89:44 something like I think six or Oh, wow. I thought,

89:50 . I like that. Um, , I didn't buy it. I

89:56 somebody else did but I was searching , uh I was searching uh,

90:07 week or two ago to see if can land another copy. And sure

90:11 I did find one. Uh, happy to say that I didn't,

90:19 didn't pay that much for it. , I, I'd, I'd had

90:24 copy or two but I hadn't uh , they got lost or some place

90:29 some move. But here's the basic . Once again that uh with the

90:34 S P we imagine that we've got seismic source, we've got our seismic

90:46 and we shake the earth somehow. now we have a borehole and we're

90:51 put geophones or motion sensors or, distribute acoustic systems or accelerometers or some

90:58 sensing device in the well. so the whole concept. We gotta create

91:05 vibration somehow, a mechanical vibration that's disturb the, the ocean or

91:11 the sediments a little bit. And amount of disruption with um with our

91:16 seismic waves is on the order of micron. It's not very big,

91:20 just a very, very minute vibration the earth and then it's gonna propagate

91:28 the earth and rattle around and, then we're going to detect that motion

91:33 the well with our receiver. we can uh we can do all

91:41 of different geometries and it all looks . They all have different names,

91:47 there's, they're just different ways to the source and receiver and why um

91:55 they're all given a name is because name uh describes something about the

92:01 But it um it also describes uh much it's gonna cost you. So

92:13 can see here that a checks shot , you only put a couple of

92:20 in the well and it's just checking velocity to uh to different depths.

92:40 zero offset means that we're dealing generally a one dimensional material and that the

92:49 is quite close to the well So by zero offset, it's just

92:54 that the source is close to the head. But it also sort of

92:59 that everything is one dimensional that, the earth is flat and that it's

93:05 of like a, it's sort of a well log that everything is vertical

93:10 and one dimensional pretty simple a walk as you can see is when the

93:15 is right above the receiver, uh V S P. The other big

93:19 means that the source is substantially So now we have to take into

93:25 offset effects and you can see the kinds of names With the offset

93:38 We kind of imagine that the world still one D one dimensional. But

93:46 I can make a bit of a away from the bore hole because the

93:49 point is away from the borehole. I start to look at 3D,

93:57 could have shots anywhere. And now gonna be able to reconstruct a three

94:03 , not just a one or a dimensional picture, but actually a 0D

94:09 . And the different geometries once get different names walk around in the

94:13 case, walk away walk above. One that is a little bit different

94:20 the reverse of E S P, means that I put a source in

94:23 well, and I have receivers on surface. So those are all the

94:32 kinds of geometries that we can We have. Um So by walk

94:37 , we imagine that there's sources that going away from or walking away from

94:43 well head. And you could see this can give a, a set

94:49 waves that are simply shown here. now we start to look at what

94:58 we going to record from the So we saw there that we can

95:06 that the, the source is vibrating shaking or impulsing energy is gonna come

95:14 and that's going to hit the borehole our measurements are gonna be made at

95:18 borehole. Likewise, energy is gonna down and hit a reflector and bounce

95:26 and will, will grabbed out of borehole too. Now, for the

95:31 S P, there's something that's pretty . You can see that some of

95:38 waves are captured when they're going down some of these waves are captured when

95:42 going up. So we've got downgoing and we've got upgoing waves and we're

95:53 use both of them. The downgoing are gonna tell us about transmission

95:58 The upgoing waves are gonna tell us reflection properties. So those are both

96:03 to us. So once again, could imagine if depth was increasing this

96:13 and with V S P it's, plotted always in a lot of different

96:19 . So you gotta, gotta put head on the side, stand on

96:23 hands, do all kinds of different to, to understand what's going

96:30 Once again, we have to always at the scales and the units to

96:35 out what is happening. So we've depth going into the earth like

96:39 We imagine that there's been a shot the surface and that energy is going

96:45 the earth. So we imagine the goes into the earth. That's the

97:01 wave. And then at different it's going to hit an interface and

97:08 back to the surface. So energy gone into the earth and bounced

97:14 It's gone into the earth bounced back the earth deeper and bounce back.

97:24 this is basically a shot gather as can imagine that I had receivers all

97:33 way down in the earth and I a shot and this is what each

97:39 would see. OK. So we can model that we can take

97:53 . Now plotted the other way we have a log. And we could

97:59 if I look at the actual we've got actual offset, actual

98:07 a log in depth. I can shooting. And here's my energy that's

98:11 into the earth. So this is propagation in the herb and this is

98:24 we would see. And I'm having little trouble seeing because it's allergy season

98:35 it makes my eyes go crazy. . Today was very, very

98:44 Yeah. Yeah. It's, we're told that it's happening earlier this

98:52 . I, I could have told that a few days ago, for

98:55 . Oh, yeah. Do you some allergies or? No?

99:01 I do. And it's, I really only have seasonal allergies but

99:06 , it's this season so, you know what? I, I

99:10 never had, I never had seasonal um until coming to Houston and,

99:18 it doesn't affect anything with me except eyes and my eyes go crazy different

99:25 . Um Thank God for Zortec Yeah, there we go. So

99:35 but back to this. So when looking at data in depth, if

99:40 had a receiver in depth, this the kind of information I would

99:45 It's taking longer to get in depth we can see in the right.

99:49 that's my direct downgoing wave in depth then it's hitting interfaces and bouncing back

99:55 the surface. So if I had GEO phone right at the surface,

99:59 going to see the direct arrival, primary reflection and a primary reflection.

100:05 this receiving in the surface is our we know and love from surface

100:09 But now we get to see how whole wave field is propagating in the

100:13 and how it's bouncing around. And on the, on the right

100:18 it's just showing what the wave field really look like inside the earth.

100:23 it's propagating all the way down. , but that then of course,

100:32 back, giving us these guys, two different ways to look at and

100:37 to understand what the V S P . Then inside the uh the G

100:48 that we have in the V S typically has a vertical sensor and a

100:53 sensor. And we get, we get the, the different components of

101:01 wa field as measured either in the sensor or the horizontal sensor. And

101:06 got those all the way down the . And you can see that.

101:18 , we're thinking that there's not just compression wave that's going down, there's

101:22 a shear wave that's going down And so we measure that shear wave

101:25 the vertical sensor as well as on horizontal sensor. So we really have

101:34 full V SPS or three because normally have a three component GEO and a

101:40 and two horizontals. So there's at depth we've got a measurement. So

101:45 fact, we've got three shot gathers , horizontal, one and horizontal

101:52 So I've got three data sets for shot good. Let's take a quick

102:01 , Stephanie and then we'll come back finish off for about half an

102:04 So let's just take five and we'll it about four and then come back

102:08 do four V S P Ok, you. All right. See you

102:12 a bit. Ok, great. , we're talking uh about general ideas

102:24 the V S P and the general being, uh, something that

102:29 disturbs or mechanically alters the surface or it. Um, in terms of

102:36 , there are lots of different sources we use. The first one is

102:40 called impulsive and impulsive means that there's one big whack or, or hit

102:46 something like that or explosion. So not uh a continuous shake. It's

102:55 one um disturbance. So impulsive is off uh dynamite. And you can

103:03 the guy here, he's got um I probably five lbs of dynamite.

103:11 these, these guys get screwed together each and then you put a little

103:15 cap in it. He's got his cap. And so that is an

103:20 sources. The, the standard shot to be £5 at 50 ft,

103:26 is an awful lot of dynamite. , uh smaller charges are often used

103:32 they're just less dangerous and uh less . And then there's a compressed air

103:39 that could just accelerate a plate. Another one that's uh this was compressed

103:45 that would um that would put drive , drive a plate down. So

103:55 are all impulsive sources that are used the seismic world. Dynamite is still

104:00 quite a bit in, in various . Uh It's a great source

104:04 it just produces one nice big And so that's easy to interpret.

104:08 so uh dynamite is pretty good. Although it is dangerous and uh those

104:19 who've worked in the field with dynamite usually had one or two close calls

104:23 some kind of myself included. um better not to work with

104:31 Um Then the other, our other source, of course, on land

104:36 uh the vibe, the vibratory And in this case, we have

104:43 some kind of method of putting down a base plate and shaking the base

104:48 . And those guys come in smaller like this one, which is similar

104:53 the one that we have at the . In fact, this is ours

104:57 the university. And uh then you put a lot of them together if

105:02 want to get a much deeper uh or a lot more energy into the

105:08 . So in this case, it's and it sweeps or moves through a

105:13 of different frequencies and that's maybe over course of uh 15 seconds. And

105:22 you want to do that is you put a lot of energy into the

105:27 , but you don't have to do all at once. So when we

105:36 up all the energy that's put in ground, it might be the energy

105:41 of setting off a lot of But we haven't damaged the, the

105:50 or waste a lot of energy in rearranging the near surface. We've

105:55 a fairly low amplitude but vibratory sweep the earth and then we can just

106:01 afterward and make it look like it dynamite. So that's the beauty of

106:06 vibe. In fact, I was on the uh the Langseth ship

106:15 Which is um a big vessel. the main National Science Foundation, the

106:19 American uh science ship around 70 m . So it's um what 250 ft

106:27 ship. So it's around almost as as a football field. Uh I

106:34 have a chance to post the but um we went down yesterday and

106:38 a look at it and they have air guns. So in the marine

106:43 , which will show you put release air in the water, but they

106:50 a lot of backflips to satisfy environmental constraints. So in other words,

106:59 uh you have to let the hair , air guns hiss for a little

107:02 . If there are any marine fish or anything turtles around, then

107:07 they'll clear out if they don't like . But there are a lot of

107:13 jurisdictions that just say, you know , you can't do any seismic shooting

107:16 , including the east coast of the . We don't care what you

107:20 The answer is no, whatever your is, the answer is no.

107:26 uh so there's a big push to to figure out. Well, how

107:30 we gently put energy into the ocean that it doesn't even begin to think

107:38 disturbing mammal populations or anything else. the only real way to do that

107:45 to do it slowly and gently over period of time. So people are

107:51 to develop a marine vibrating source that be low amplitude, not irritating and

107:58 do that for a long time and correlate it and make it look like

108:02 big big big bang. So that's , that's part of the idea.

108:07 hasn't um, hasn't really caught on . But um just looking at the

108:16 of the tar, the tallest they typically have three wildlife observers on

108:20 to look for any whales, anything all. And um and then they'll

108:26 or change their shooting to uh accommodate . So once again, here's

108:32 uh here's the kind of marine an impulsive source where you have a

108:37 air and you've got some air uh devices. So you compress the air

108:44 then just let it uh go into ocean and just compressed air that causes

108:48 bubble and then the bubble is a and that travels through the, the

108:52 column and into the sub bottom and and reflects. Then we have streamers

108:58 or hydrophones or pressure sensitive devices and record the ref reflections or in our

109:04 , the borehole, we're gonna put tool in the borehole and record these

109:09 air gun sources. So that's the idea. Um And we can see

109:19 with 2020 vision. So we've got , well, we're gonna have the

109:25 and grab all the waves that are in the well. So how do

109:31 receive the data? Well, it's our simplest case is with a multiple

109:36 GE phone. So we're gonna put tool in the, well, and

109:42 one son, son, um such , in this case, it's uh

109:54 like to affix the tool to the wall somehow. Just so when the

110:03 is propagating through the earth, we grab it with the tool and we

110:07 do that a few ways. Just the mechanical arm, the mechanical arm

110:11 the receiver to the uh to well, if I'm in a cased

110:17 , and it's iron that I could have a rotating magnet and turn on

110:21 electromagnet and then attract the tool to uh steel casing by an electromagnet.

110:29 one way or the other, we like to get this tool affixed to

110:36 whole wall so that we could record vibrations. And then ideally, we'll

110:43 a lot of them so that we put a lot of them in

110:47 in the well and then shoot once acquire that data all the time just

110:51 one time. So if I've got five level tool, I'm gonna shoot

110:57 , move shoot, record move and gonna have to shoot and only record

111:03 traces. If I had 100 level , I could just shoot and record

111:07 the traces at once. So that's better. Yeah, of course,

111:14 level tool is gonna be more expensive a five level tool. So Most

111:20 the tools now are gonna be at 11 levels. So you're not in

111:24 well, too long because remember that got the, well, and I've

111:29 instruments and if I'm logging, it some time to log. And so

111:35 means that the, the drill rig to be still on site and it

111:41 be $10,000 a day or if I'm , it's $1 million dollars a

111:51 a million a day for a drill . Wow. Yeah. So,

112:01 , you can't fool around. So not even really the instrument that or

112:08 recording or all the geophysics. That's the expense. The expense is just

112:13 rig or the vessel. So typically we're making these logging measurements or E

112:22 P people want you to get in do your work and get out of

112:27 . So that's, that's part of deal. So some people always

112:35 wonder why geophysicists are always in a in the field. Why are GE

112:42 always in a hurry in the field them money? Yeah, because you've

112:50 got all this equipment and there are there are a lot of things about

112:55 equipment. Number one, the equipment effectively costing you, you want to

113:01 it in use all the time, it does cost you also, when

113:09 doing stuff, when you finally get working, you want to continue to

113:14 because you're always afraid that something's gonna and go down and you're not gonna

113:20 data. So once you get everything , let's just keep going, keep

113:25 , keep going, keep going because gonna break, something's up, something's

113:29 go wrong soon. And so don't . So that's the other thing.

113:36 then often we're using power supplies one or the other. You're filling up

113:39 , you're doing something, you're using . And so you're typically a little

113:45 in the field because it's expensive. got people clearly you don't want things

113:51 break and go down and you're, , you're using resources, whether it's

113:56 or storage or some little thing. always concerned that, um, you've

114:01 people and equipment and power and storage everything going on. So you want

114:05 do your job well, because you aren't going to get a chance to

114:08 out there again. So you don't because in the well location, the

114:13 on site. So in a day two, because the holes drilled down

114:19 day or two, they're probably gonna to demobilize. So you've got this

114:24 where you have to get the job , it has to be done pretty

114:28 and you're not gonna get a chance do it again. So don't screw

114:34 . So those are the uh head the field requirements. So, uh

114:41 that all goes ok. And people lots of practice and obviously things do

114:45 up every once in a while and the way it is. Sorry.

114:54 that's how we make the measurement. then, like I was saying,

114:57 going to have planned it before. What kind of tools are we going

115:00 use? Uh How deep do they to go? So, for

115:05 the simple things, how big is well itself, uh I gotta get

115:09 right size of tool. If I to clamp to the formation, then

115:12 have to have an arm that will so far enough, simple,

115:16 practical thing. If it happens to a very warm well, a hot

115:20 , then I need to know that instruments will stand that temperature if we're

115:25 pretty deep. And if we're gonna down really deep, can the instruments

115:29 that kind of pressure? So for wells, of course, none of

115:34 is such a big deal. But we start to get more extreme

115:37 deeper wells, hotter wells, caustic , H two S wells, all

115:43 kind of stuff. Uh We have plan for those eventualities. So

115:52 we often call this the original, was called a vertical seismic profile because

115:56 the day, almost all of our were vertical. Sorry, my thing

116:04 mute. Yeah. Yeah. So everything was vertical. So we called

116:09 seismic, a vertical seismic measurement, vertical seismic profile. Well as we

116:15 in the US right now, almost the wells end up being horizontal.

116:24 most whales will start off vertically in life, but they will deviate and

116:29 horizontal shortly thereafter. So while everything to be vertical in it, that's

116:36 easy to understand. And we still uh measurements in the vertical parts of

116:42 horizontal. Well, before it kicks and goes horizontal, uh most of

116:49 wells end up being horizontal now and still make measurements inside them. Now

116:56 get tools inside the well, we have to put it on coiled tubing

117:02 we might have to have a sensor the drilling color right by the drill

117:08 or you might have to tractor it where there's a little device that will

117:13 and drag the tools in. So are all kinds of different ways that

117:17 can get a seismic or a motion in the well, now what we

117:24 , we can start to see here on the right is we've got depth

117:36 then, and the upper part and shell section, we just gonna maybe

117:41 a shot every Um sparse location, every a couple 100 m which I

117:48 because then we don't get very well data. But then you might start

117:53 sample much more closely in the areas interest. And you can see what

117:58 what kind of information you get with different types of sampling. Clearly.

118:02 we're sampling more closely vertically, when got a lot more traces, then

118:06 can see much more of what, happening with multiples and with reflections.

118:12 when we sample really intensely, then start to see all the waves and

118:16 get much, much better resolution. can understand better. I can process

118:21 . So as always as geophysicists, want more data. And that's why

118:33 engineers, other people get mad at because that's all we want. All

118:37 guys wanna do is spend money and too much time. OK?

118:45 we'll get it right and you guys don't get it right. So there

118:48 go. So in terms of when happens, typically the V S P

118:56 , will drill the well, uh got casing in the top, it

119:00 be open hole on the bottom and we're going to do all of our

119:04 . And then the V S P typically come after that. So we

119:08 make the measurement encased well or in hole. And then ultimately, if

119:16 well is case, we can still measurements inside the casing which the uh

119:21 drilling engineers would prefer because they don't instruments going in uncased wells just in

119:27 they get caught or stuck or something . So, um, that's

119:35 Now, if we wanted to uh permanent monitoring, we might and take

119:42 instruments and even cement them in the , the outside of casing, which

119:48 more and more now with fiber for optics. In this case, we're

119:56 installing um G phones outside of casing then somatic men and you can see

120:08 standard kind of uh drilling and, logging operation here. And then we

120:14 we arranging all the instruments to put the well and uh cement it outside

120:20 but in the well, so that can make all these measurements.

120:27 So what do we, uh what we really want? The BS P

120:30 ? And here are a couple of original ones we talked about integrating or

120:34 the Sonic log to get time to , which is one way that we

120:40 get that time to depth relationship. it's a little bit funky because the

120:44 log might have problems in some place another. And it only measures really

120:48 to the well. So the most way to get a time to depth

120:53 for seismic analysis is from the DS . We just have a size,

120:59 just have a phone at different depths then we just whack the surface and

121:03 measure the time it takes to get that depth So that's the true seismic

121:08 to death from the DS P. that, just from knowing the energy

121:15 arrives at this depth and the, time it takes to get to this

121:18 , we can take the interval, depth change, the time change.

121:23 that gives us an interval velocity. we can calculate interval velocities pretty

121:28 We might want to know something about . How does the energy decrease in

121:34 as we go deeper? That can an attenuation or a Q A quality

121:41 calculation. And then uh you if we walk source away, we

121:53 get some ideas about the directional dependence velocities. And so we like to

121:58 that too. So we from the from the V S P, we're

122:04 gonna make another log. It's gonna a velocity log and attenuation log and

122:09 going to look like any of our logs except it's gonna be a little

122:14 more sparse with normal well logs. did we say that there was a

122:20 every what interval or what depth when look at the well log all the

122:28 points in the well log is that , somewhere around the foot. So

122:35 , so the well logs are output value about every foot. The VSP

122:42 the receivers are spaced about 30 ft . So it's really out putting a

122:49 about every 30 ft or something like . So vertically speaking, it's much

122:56 resolved. It's still a log, it's a very low resolution seismic

123:06 Then we're interested in um in that like any other log. But also

123:11 now we're trying to understand surface we're trying to understand if I go

123:15 shoot a big five survey with surface . Um what's happening in the sub

123:23 , you know, the service receivers , are getting all the echoes,

123:27 I have to infer what's happening in subsurface with the V S P.

123:31 actually got G phones inside the earth I can see inside the earth what's

123:38 . So that gives me ideas about source signature, uh what's happening with

123:43 the multi pathing. And then I also start to look at walkway effects

123:48 get the amplitude versus offset A V responses. So which, which you've

123:57 five courses already? Stephanie. sir. So which ones did you

124:03 ? You had? Um I I think it was seismic wave theory

124:10 Doctor Thompson, uh rock physics with um I think it was seismic interpretation

124:19 doctor and uh the potential field methods Doctor Bird, right? OK.

124:29 , good. Well, um hopefully seen some of this stuff a few

124:34 and it continues to sink in and no shame in that. I have

124:38 some of this stuff at least 50 and I'm still trying to learn

124:46 Yeah, Doctor Z's class kind of me a little bit. That one

124:50 a lot of seismic. So, . Well, and, and you

124:56 into a lot of the, um little details and when you're a seismic

125:00 and you're doing research or processing or , you really are in the

125:06 you know, that's, that's where is. You're, you're trying to

125:10 coax out little little details and so want to um do everything you

125:18 But um and in, in a , the V S P sort of

125:21 some of that. So now we're getting these rock properties from

125:25 We're getting logs, we're getting to how waves propagate. But we're also

125:32 this uh interpretation that takes well logs seismic. And so we, we're

125:39 see again how to uh how to all that. Then the other big

125:46 is that we have, we want make a picture. I'm trying to

125:49 a picture of the subsurface. And , the world doesn't really care what

125:53 of picture it is. Just give a picture that shows where, what

125:57 rocks are, what's their geometry and in them and how do I get

126:01 . So give me a picture that me that that's, that's our

126:08 And so the V S P is technique that allows us to, to

126:13 a picture. Now, there are lot of reasons why we do want

126:30 put the uh the receivers inside the . And one of the big reasons

126:40 that it's just a lot quieter. if we, if we look at

126:47 the vibrations that are happening in the , there's surface waves propagating along,

126:52 , there's traffic, there's all kinds stuff happening. But if I go

127:01 deeper into the well into the then a lot of that cultural

127:06 um industrial noise, environmental noise, that stuff has been damped out and

127:12 not propagating. So down deep, very little vibration happening artificially. So

127:20 ambient or environmental noise is much, smaller and here's just one such

127:27 And do you remember the DB I know it's like decibels but I

127:37 remember like the specific scale. it's just a, it's a,

127:42 just a faster way to give a that expresses a ratio. So that's

127:49 it is. It's just really the of a ratio. So with the

127:53 scale, you're, it's always two . It's how much bigger or smaller

127:59 one thing compared to another thing. explicitly, it's amplitude one over amplitude

128:13 , the logarithm, the logarithm of based 10 about that times minus

128:19 So what it means is that say here, We would say that at

128:30 ft deep, the noise is 60 less than at the surface. And

128:39 what does that mean? It just that the surface amplitude over the moral

128:47 is 10 to the third, the base 10 of 10 to the third

128:51 just three. We just take the for the base 10 and that's minus

128:56 . So minus 60 DB means it's , 1000, the value of the

129:06 , Which is incredible. So it's times more noisy on the surface in

129:11 area than it is at 900 m feet. So if I wanted to

129:19 get a much better reading Of what's I'm trying to do a tele seismic

129:26 receive uh an earthquake. Then by my receiver down 900 ft it's

129:33 way, way quieter and I should able to receive much, much smaller

129:39 and get them. So here's why we do this one? Suppose the

129:43 owns 150 ft underground. How, the noise level? What's the relative

129:51 level? isn't it just that 40? Yeah, but then convert

129:57 to the actual amplitude differences. Oh So at 150, it's for

130:20 So surface sample and I just tried . That was say that the borehole

130:35 the surface amplitude is, well, the borehole amplitude is one.

130:41 What's the surface amplitude to be How much bigger is the surface amplitude

130:47 the borehole amplitude? Oh, 1000 ? Is that what you're saying?

130:53 , that was that one specifically? , for this one specifically, I

130:57 the J phones at 150 ft How much more quiet is that than

131:03 surface? So, if about 150 I've got a noise level of

131:14 What's the noise level at the surface to this graph? Oh, so

131:25 it would be. So I'm convert 40 DB and tell me what

131:30 surface amplitude is. If the borehole is one. OK. I'm not

131:40 gonna lie. You've lost me. don't, I don't know what I'm

131:46 . I wanna convert it. I'm . Well, this is, this

131:50 really just manipulating the D V OK. So I, I would

131:56 just uh figure out how to use D V scale. And so

132:05 if I say that the, uh my borehole amplitude is one and that's

132:14 DB down from the surface, then means that this is minus 20 on

132:22 left hand side to the minus 20 10 aptitude one over aptitude two.

132:30 minus 20 here is minus 20. means it's just one. So the

132:34 of base 10 of one is one is 10. So that means that

132:40 surface aptitude is 10 times the moral . That's what 20 BB means.

132:47 DB is a factor of 10, DB is a factor of 100 60

132:52 is a factor of 1000. So that's just the DB scale.

133:04 you might say, well, why you just say 1000? OK.

133:08 was like, I don't know what's . Yeah. Well, when you

133:13 , it's just that it's a, smaller number to say 60 DB.

133:20 the scale is defined as a logarithmic that's defined to make all the numbers

133:29 and able to express uh a big value. It's like in

133:34 the, the scales are logarithmically plotted that you could put a whole range

133:39 numbers and give them a, Give all some, some weight from .2

133:45 2000 or something. If we had a linear spacing between all those,

133:51 all the small numbers like from 10 would be Miniscule because I've divided it

133:58 linearly to 2000. So that's why plotted on that logarithmic paper because that

134:04 everything. Uh Likewise here with the DB is just a complicated way

134:10 give you a ratio. So if surface amplitude is 1000 times bigger than

134:18 bal amplitude, that means 1000 over , the logarithm base 10 of 1000

134:24 the larger than base 10 of 10 the third, which is just

134:29 So the magnitude ratio and, and or DB of 1000 to 1 says

134:38 the one is 60 DB less Or times 10 to the 3rd less.

134:46 that's just the DB skill. It's just a faster way to Talk

134:55 two numbers, how much bigger or two numbers are. So, I

135:04 the surface amplitude, it's really noisy it's a million times bigger than the

135:10 amplitude. So on the surface, it's a million times bigger than say

135:16 at 18, m. So I could, I could write that

135:24 and say, OK, it's a times bigger or I could just take

135:32 million is 10 of the six. this number is 10 to the

135:37 the logarithm based 10 of 10 of six is just six. So it's

135:44 DB different. The negative is expressing I want to see how much smaller

135:57 guy is than this guy. I call it a positive. I could

136:02 that the surface noise is a million bigger than this guy or that this

136:07 a million times smaller. If it's , I'm gonna say it's negative,

136:11 bigger. I'm gonna say it's So, you know, 100,000 is

136:17 to the fifth. We just take exponent five multiply it by 20.

136:22 100 DB. The reason to harp this a little bit is that in

136:31 lot of literature, you're gonna not it go from one to a

136:38 The scale is gonna be plotted in from zero or 10 of the 01

136:45 to minus A B which is 10 the fourth, that's 10,000. So

136:50 gonna, most of the scales are be plotted in DB or how much

136:58 from the maximum value are you So this is just a uh a

137:06 to compress The ratio of two And the equation is here that the

137:18 , the relationship between two numbers, any number X one and X

137:24 whatever that, is we just take logarithm to base 10 Multiply it by

137:32 . And that's how much smaller one than the other. Just on the

137:35 scale. It's named after Alexander Graham . Because what they needed was when

137:43 were trying to transmit signals across telephone signals, the telephone signal would

137:51 off with distance. So they would to say, oh, the telephone

137:56 fell off by a factor of one over this distance. And they wanted

138:03 faster, shorter way to be able say that same thing. And so

138:07 said from its starting point to its point, here's how much it decreased

138:13 GB. And so everybody knows that the amount of decrease from one one

138:22 to another point. And if you at music magazines or anything, there's

138:30 a magazine that was a popular um magazine called Downbeat, which was a

138:38 on DB. But on all the , the uh recording engineers scales are

138:46 every geophysical graph. You'll see that's two numbers or looking at some kind

138:53 energy or wave propagation is gonna be in DB. So you need to

138:59 that if that's a logarithmic scale. . So that's, uh,

139:05 it gets quieter. Um, we're gonna do one little thing and then

139:09 can, um, break for the . Let me just see this one

139:16 thing to get us our brains working then we'll go to Friday night.

139:23 think my brain is hurting right It's right now. Ok.

139:26 let's leave it for tomorrow. uh, word we've had a big

139:32 . Uh, So we'll see you morning at nine and then we'll,

139:39 do a couple of little more exercises and, and then, uh,

139:44 then go on from there. So we'll do more V S P and

139:47 more exercises and, and, get that chunk done. Ok.

139:56 . Um, just for strictly completion , uh, let me quickly

140:31 Just because I mentioned it. Let's do this one and then, then

140:35 off. Um, So Stephanie, can see here again. We've

140:43 uh, another example. So the is, we've got a well

140:48 We've got a geo phone at 68 ft and then the energy is going

140:53 , down, down, down, and it, We recorded again at

141:02 ft. So we imagine that we've got energy that's going down the,

141:08 , It passes the G phone at 76 at this time and then it

141:14 down to the bottom of the, , at this time. So,

141:18 is the average velocity across this Then we can move on to Friday

141:29 . Bye. So the bottom, bottom depth is 11 930. That

141:39 depth is 68 76. The waves going across velocity is delta Z over

141:45 T how long does it take to from one to the next? Dep

144:19 been talking this whole time. I not realize I was on mute.

144:26 . Yep. Sorry. I just some water. No, you're

144:30 I was talking my way through it then I realized I was on

144:33 Oh, ok. Yeah. Um got Like, if I didn't.

144:39 . Which I hope I did. got like 63 ft per millisecond.

144:49 I did 1193 -68, 76. then I did for my time,

144:57 11,930 is like around Like 10 80 1000 for that 68 76.

145:09 So watch your pick 1080 or is right? It's almost 2000. I

145:19 sure of the units. It's No, I'm at not the,

145:27 units like the, the sectioning. . 10. Well, you can

145:35 that it's one second in two seconds 1000 milliseconds and 2000 milliseconds. So

145:40 just one second, two, three second. Uh-huh. And there

145:45 10 little blips between it. So 100 milliseconds each. Oh, they're

145:55 oh, I meant 1800. Not 80. You did. And I

145:59 that I was wondering like I was , I was like that doesn't look

146:04 . Um 50 54 Divided by OK. So 6.3, 6.3 Watt

146:17 per millisecond. And then how many per second is that .63?

146:35 It would be 50 54 Divided by 028-07 88. Not 1.8. So

146:57 sounds right to me. OK. there's the calculation. So we've got

147:08 , the, the depth interval which 11 9, 30 minus 60

147:14 And then I picked 1.82 seconds or milliseconds. So that's really just,

147:31 gone this deep and it's taken that time. We've got Z over T

147:38 is 63 97 more or less. . Good. So that, that's

147:44 . Again, this is, this a real data case. The guy

147:47 it to me from the Gulf of . And so this is exactly what

147:50 would do. And now we know interval velocity, the actual true seismic

147:54 velocity over this area in the Gulf Mexico. So that's um and that's

148:01 that we need to know for the physics, for the um for the

148:07 , for the time to depth for lot of different reasons. And so

148:10 is uh manipulating some real data and , the reason to bash away in

148:15 units and everything is so that you look at this fast and know

148:18 And then like you're saying, get sense of is that right? And

148:25 know that we just talked about is around 2000 m/s. So if

148:33 takes, it takes a second to 6000 ft, it takes a second

148:40 go around 2000 m. So this even at depth in the Gulf of

148:45 is around that 2000 m per second . So now this is just one

148:55 time because this is the energy going . But if you double deck,

149:07 would get somewhere around or 1000 right? Mhm. Which um We

149:37 that should be somewhere around 4000 right? If if our little equation

149:44 . Mhm And this is about 12,000 , which is around 4000 m.

149:56 and we just calculated that the velocity 63 97 which is around 2000 m

150:02 second. So guess what? We tell any really big stories there?

150:08 was, that's all makes sense. how long is it gonna take to

150:13 down 4000 m around and back around milliseconds or four seconds? So if

150:23 came up to you a good old from the Gulf of Mexico Exploration Team

150:30 said, hey, Miss Smarty pads we're paying you I got the seismic

150:36 in this vessel. Wanna tell me long to record my play is down

150:40 12,000 ft and I don't use stupid units. So you better tell me

150:45 long I need to record and you'd , oh uh yeah, five seconds

150:50 be safe. Wow ! Ok. like you sometimes. So these are

150:58 uh we wanna be able to manipulate stuff so that you rapidly can get

151:04 answer even with simple stuff because we to have a secure answer and you

151:09 to get it fast and then when get more complicated, you can say

151:14 should be around here and if it's , I'm getting worried. Ok.

151:22 . Well, that's a little bit metal aerobics and now you've done it

151:24 so now we can guilt free, and enjoy a few minutes,

151:30 Ok. Great. Stephanie. We'll we'll see you tomorrow. Ok.

151:34 you so much. Cheers. Bye

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