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In the oil and gas industry, depth in a well is the measurement, for any point in that well, of the distance between a reference point or elevation, and that point. It is the most common method of reference for locations in the well, and therefore, in oil industry speech, "depth" also refers to the location itself. By extension, depth can refer to locations below, or distances from, a reference point or elevation, even when there is no well. In that sense, depth is a concept related to elevation, albeit in the opposite direction. The elevation of a Geographic location is its height above a fixed reference point often the mean sea level. Depth in a well is not necessarily measured vertically or along a straight line.

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The specification of depth

Although it is an intuitive concept, depth in a well is the source of much confusion because it is frequently not specified correctly. Absolute depth should always be specified with 3 components:

and none of these 3 components should ever be left implicit. An oil platform or oil rig is a large structure used to house workers and machinery needed to drill and/or extract oil and Natural gas through wells Example: the top of a reservoir may be found at 1,500mMDRT in a particular well (1,500m measured depth below the rotary table), which may be equal to 1,492mTVDMSL (1,492m true-vertical-depth below mean sea level) after correction for deviations from vertical.

Depth in a well as used in the oil and gas industry

  Example: RT = -10mMDLAT

Depth in practice: examples from in the oil and gas industry in Australia

Whichever combination of unit, path, and reference can be used, as long as they result in fully specified, unambiguous depths.

Figures

Fig. 1: The specification of depths
Fig. 1: The specification of depths
Fig. 2: Differential depths: reservoir thickness, isochor, isopach
Fig. 2: Differential depths: reservoir thickness, isochor, isopach


Specification of an absolute depth: in Figure 1 above, point P1 might be at 3207mMDRT and 2370mTVDMSL, while point P2 might be at 2530mMDRT and 2502mTVDLAT.
Specification of a differential depth or a thickness: in Figure 2 above, the thickness of the reservoir penetrated by the well might be 57mMD or 42mTVD, even though the reservoir true stratigraphic thickness in that area (or isopach) might be only 10m, and its true vertical thickness (isochore), 14m.

External references


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