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Color images of Kansas subsurface geology from well logs

January 1, 1986

Modern wireline log combinations give highly diagnostic information that goes beyond the basic shale content, pore volume, and fluid saturation of older logs. Pattern recognition of geology from logs is made conventionally through either the examination of log overlays or log crossplots. Both methods can be combined through the use of color as a medium of information by setting the three color primaries of blue, green, and red light as axes of three dimensional color space. Multiple log readings of zones are rendered as composite color mixtures which, when plotted sequentially with depth, show lithological successions in a striking manner. The method is extremely simple to program and display on a color monitor. Illustrative examples are described from the Kansas subsurface. ?? 1986.

Publication Year 1986
Title Color images of Kansas subsurface geology from well logs
DOI 10.1016/0098-3004(86)90066-X
Authors D.R. Collins, J.H. Doveton
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Computers & Geosciences
Index ID 70014547
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse