Tom Brent
Geological Survey of Canada
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Featured researches published by Tom Brent.
Geophysics | 2006
Gilles Bellefleur; Michael Riedel; Tom Brent
Gas-hydrate accumulations located onshore in Arctic permafrost regions are seen as a potential source of natural gas. Surprisingly, most of the gas hydrate found in the Mackenzie Delta and Beaufort Sea areas was indirectly discovered or inferred from conventional hydrocarbon exploration programs. One of these occurrences, the Mallik gas-hydrate field (Figure 1), has received particular attention over the last 10 years. Two internationally partnered research well programs have intersected three intervals of gas hydrates and have allowed successful extraction of subpermafrost core samples with significant gas hydrates. The gas-hydrate intervals are up to 40 m thick and have high gas-hydrate saturation, sometimes exceeding 80% of pore volume of unconsolidated clastic sediments with average porosities from 25–40%. At Mallik, the gas-hydrate intervals are located at depths of 900–1100 m and are localized on the crest of an anticline.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007
Gilles Bellefleur; Michael Riedel; Tom Brent; Fred Wright; Scott R. Dallimore
Wave attenuation is an important physical property of hydrate-bearing sediments that is rarely taken into account in site characterization with seismic data. We present a field example showing improved images of hydrate-bearing sediments on seismic data after compensation of attenuation effects. Compressional quality factors estimated from zero-offset Vertical Seismic Profiling data acquired at Mallik, Northwest Territories, Canada, demonstrate significant wave attenuation for hydrate-bearing sediments. These results are in agreement with previous attenuation estimates obtained from sonic logs and crosshole data at different frequency intervals. The application of an inverse Q-filter to compensate attenuation effects of permafrost and hydrate-bearing sediments improved the resolution of surface 3D seismic data and its correlation with log data, particularly for the shallowest gas hydrate interval. Compensation of the attenuation effects of the permafrost likely explains most of the improvements for the shallow gas hydrate zone. Our results show that characterization of the Mallik gas hydrates with seismic data not corrected for attenuation would tend to overestimate thicknesses and lateral extent of hydrate-bearing strata and hence, the volume of hydrates in place.
Archive | 2008
Gilles Bellefleur; Michael Riedel; Stephanie Mair; Tom Brent
Two internationally-partnered research well programs, in 1998 and 2002, studied the Mallik gas hydrate accumulation in the Mackenzie Delta, Canada. Gas hydrate bearing intervals were cored, logged and production tested thus establishing Mallik as an excellent site for testing geophysical imaging techniques. Here, we apply a model-based acoustic impedance inversion technique to 3D seismic reflection data acquired over the Mallik area to characterize gas hydrate occurrences and to help define their spatial extent away from well control. Sonic logs in Mallik research wells show that P-wave velocity of sediments increases with hydrate saturation, enough to produce detectable reflections for the lower two of three known gas hydrate zones. The inversion method converts these reflections into acoustic impedances from which velocity and hydrate saturation can be estimated. Acoustic impedance inversion results indicate that the deepest gas hydrate zone covers an area of approximately 900,000 m 2 . With some assumptions on the lateral continuity of gas hydrate saturation, porosity and thickness measured at the wells, we estimate that this zone contains approximately 771x10 6 m 3 of gas at standard atmospheric pressure. At a regional scale, results allowed the detection of a high-velocity area near the A-06 well, about 6 km south-east of 5L-38. We infer that the high velocity area corresponds to a gas hydrate accumulation. Logging data in A-06 indicate the presence of gas hydrates in this area and support our interpretation.
Basin Research | 2011
Jennifer Boutelier; Alexander R. Cruden; Tom Brent; Randell Stephenson
Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2013
Keith Dewing; Brian R. Pratt; Thomas Hadlari; Tom Brent; Jean H. Bédard; Robert H. Rainbird
Canadian Unconventional Resources and International Petroleum Conference | 2010
Gilles Bellefleur; Michael Riedel; Jun-Wei Huang; Bernd Milkereit; Tom Brent
Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2017
Michael Riedel; Tom Brent; G. Taylor; A. E. Taylor; J. K. Hong; Y. K. Jin; Scott R. Dallimore
Geophysics | 2013
Gilles Bellefleur; Michael Riedel; Tom Brent
In: Scientific results from the JOGMEC/NRCan/Aurora Mallik 2007-2008 gas hydrate production research well program, Mackenzie Delta, Northwest Territories, Canada. , ed. by Dallimore, S. R., Yamamoto, K., Wright, J. F. and Bellefleur, G. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin, 601 . Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, Canada, pp. 107-123. ISBN 978-1-100-21521-1 | 2012
M. Bellefleur; Michael Riedel; Jun-Wei Huang; T. Saeki; Bernd Milkereit; Tom Brent
Basin Research | 2018
Zhuoheng Chen; Stephen E. Grasby; Keith Dewing; Kirk G. Osadetz; Tom Brent