Geoscience Help Articles
Geoscience Help Articles
This page contains links to several videos that will help you utilize the geoscience functionality within Danomics. Our Geoscience Welcome Tututorial project walks you through this in step-by-step and we strongly encourage all users to take advantage of it.
Tutorial Videos
These videos are from the Welcome Project series and can be consumed ala carte as needed.
- Loading data
- Creating a New .map File and Adding Data
- Adding Cross Sections to a .map File
- Picking Tops (manual and AI-assisted)
- Adding Deviation Surveys
- Assigning a Project Coordinate System
- Structure and Isopach Gridding
- Styling Maps and Adding 2D and 3D displays
- Basic Log Calcs (without a petrophysics license)
- Building Reservoir Property Maps
- Adding Well logs to a 3D Display
- Landing Zone Analysis
Flows for Geoscience
The following Flows are recommended for geoscience users.
- Example Flow: Processing Deviation Surveys
- Example Flow: Structure Gridding
- Example Flow: Isopach Gridding
- Example Flow: Landing Zone Analysis
For assistance, please contact us at support@danomics.com.
Related Insights
Sample data to get started
Need some sample data to get started? The files below are from data made public by the Wyoming Oil and Gas Commission. These will allow you to get started with petrophysics, mapping, and decline curve analysis. Well header data Formation tops data Deviation survey data Well log data (las files) Production data (csv) or (excel) Wyoming counties shapefile and projection Wyoming townships shapefile and projection Haven’t found the help guide that you are looking for?
NMR Interpretation Module
Purpose The NMR interpretation module allows users to calculate porosity, bound and free fluids from the measure T1 and T2 distributions from NMR tools. Primary Outputs Discussion In oil and gas well logging, the $T_2$ distribution is used as a high-resolution "map" of the formation's pore system. While a standard porosity tool tells you how much fluid is there, NMR tells you where that fluid is trapped and whether it will flow.
General Concepts in Flows
Because Flows will be a new concept to many of you it is important to understand the general concepts that flows are built upon. These concepts are: Many tasks are repetitive These tasks should be done consistently These tasks can often be split into small pieces. What Are Flows? Flows are batch processing system that combine Flow tools to perform operations consistently across a dataset, and are especially useful for repetitive tasks like gridding data.