Standard Wireline Data Processing
IODP logging contractor: USIO/LDEO
Hole: U1343E
Expedition: 323
Location: Arctic Gateway (Bering Sea)
Latitude: 57° 33.4156' N
Longitude: 175° 48.9951' W
Logging date: August 12-13, 2009
Sea floor depth (driller's): 1967.5 m DRF
Sea floor depth (logger's): 1962.5 m WRF
Total penetration: 2711.3 m DRF (743.8 m DSF)
Total core recovered: 700.27 m (94 % of cored section)
Oldest sediment recovered: Early Pleistocene (~ 2-2.4 my)
Lithologies: silt with varying amounts of clay and diatoms, and minor amounts of sand, ash, foraminifers, calcareous nannofossils, and sponge spicules.
The logging data
was recorded by Schlumberger in DLIS format. Data were processed at the
Borehole Research Group of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in August 2009.
Tool string | Pass |
Top depth (mbsf) | Bottom depth (mbsf) | Pipe depth (mbsf) | Notes |
1.DIT/APS/HLDS/GPIT/HNGS
|
Downlog |
Open hole |
Invalid HLDS |
||
Repeat
|
Open hole |
||||
Main
|
101.5 |
Reference |
|||
2. FMS/DSI/GPIT/HNGS
|
Downhole
|
104 |
|||
Pass 1
|
Open hole |
||||
Pass 2
|
103 |
The depths in the table are for the processed logs (after depth shift to the sea floor and depth matching between passes). Generally, discrepancies may exist between the sea floor depths determined from the downhole logs and those determined by the drillers from the pipe length. Typical reasons for depth discrepancies are ship heave, wireline and pipe stretch, tides, and the difficulty of getting an accurate sea floor measurement from a 'bottom felt' depth in soft sediment.
Depth shift to sea floor and depth match. Sea floor depth was determined by the step in the gamma ray log observed at the sea floor: - 1962.5 m WRF from the DIT/APS/HLDS/GPIT/HNGS main pass. All of the logs were first depth-shifted to the sea floor (- 1962.5 m WRF) and then depth-matched to the DIT/APS/HLDS/GPIT/HNGS main pass (used as a reference).
Depth matching is typically done in the following way. One log is chosen as reference (base) log (usually the total gamma ray log from the run with the greatest vertical extent and no sudden changes in cable speed), and then the features in the equivalent logs from the other runs are matched to it in turn. This matching is performed manually. The depth adjustments that were required to bring the match log in line with the base log are then applied to all the other logs from the same tool string.
Environmental
corrections. The HNGS
data were corrected for hole size during the recording. The APS and
HLDS data were corrected for standoff and hole size respectively during the
recording.
High-resolution
data. Bulk density
(HLDS) and neutron porosity (APS) data were recorded sampling rates of 2.54 and
5.08 cm, respectively, in addition to the standard sampling rate of 15.24 cm.
The enhanced bulk density curve is the result of Schlumberger enhanced
processing technique performed on the MAXIS system onboard. While in normal
processing short-spacing data is smoothed to match the long-spacing one, in
enhanced processing this is reversed. In a situation where there is good
contact between the HLDS pad and the borehole wall (low-density correction) the
results are improved, because the short spacing has better vertical resolution.
Gamma Ray data from the SGT tool were recorded at sampling rates of 5.08 and 15.24
cm.
The quality of
the data is assessed by checking against reasonable values for the logged
lithologies, by repeatability between different passes of the same tool, and by
correspondence between logs affected by the same formation property (e.g. the
resistivity log should show similar features to the sonic velocity log).
Gamma ray logs
recorded through bottom hole assembly (BHA) and drill pipe should be used only
qualitatively, because of the attenuation of the incoming signal. The
thick-walled BHA attenuates the signal more than the thinner-walled drill pipe.
Hole diameter was recorded by the hydraulic caliper on the HLDS tool (LCAL) and by the FMS tool (C1 and C2). A wide (>12") and/or irregular borehole affects most recordings, particularly those that require eccentralization and a good contact with the borehole wall (APS, HLDS). The caliper logs indicate that the upper section of the borehole (151-267 m WMSF) was washed out to the degree (>14-19") where it has adversely affected the tool response. Thus, density and porosity logs in this depth interval should be used with caution.
A null value of
-999.25 may replace invalid log values.
Additional
information about the drilling and logging operations can be found in the
Operations and Downhole Measurements sections of the expedition reports,
Proceedings of the Integrated Drilling Program, Expedition 323.
For further questions about the logs, please contact:
Tanzhuo Liu
Phone: 845-365-8630
Fax: 845-365-3182
E-mail: Tanzhuo Liu
Cristina Broglia
Phone: 845-365-8343
Fax: 845-365-3182
E-mail: Cristina Broglia