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paleonet SHORT COURSE: APPLIED MICROPALEONTOLOGY



Please note that the contact name for registration has change while 
Prof.
Langer is in South Africa.

SHORT COURSE: APPLIED MICROPALEONTOLOGY

David Jutson, Gitte Laursen, Emma Sheldon and Martin R. Langer

A Short Course to be held at the
Department of Paleontology
University at Bonn
June 12-14, 2003

PROGRAM INFORMATION

Applied micropaleontology and biostratigraphy are integral tools in the
exploration for oil and gas. Provided that the global population and 
economy
will continue to grow at the current rate, the demand for fossil fuel 
energy
resources will remain at a high level for at least another 60 to 80 
years.
This provides the economic incentive to sustain and reinvigorate 
training
programs in the university community to meet the future demand of
stratigraphic (micro-)paleontologist in the next several decades. The 
course
is designed to give the participants an introduction to, and an
understanding of, the methods that have been developed to apply
micropaleontology to the requirements of the hydrocarbon industry. A 
full
description of the various stages of drilling a well will be given with
discussion of how these processes affects the sample material recovery 
and
quality. The various techniques employed by industrial 
micropaleontologists
from collecting sample material to applying the analytical results will 
be
discussed and demonstrated in practical exercises.

It is hoped that the course will give the participants an insight into
applied micropaleontological methods that will aid the understanding and
application of analytical results when they are dealing with drilled
material for academic or industrial purposes and in this respect it 
should
be particularly useful for academic researchers who undertake work for 
oil
companies and students contemplating working in oil exploration and
production. The course "Applied Micropaleontology" is intended for
geology/paleontology students at advanced, undergraduate or early
postgraduate level who have a keen interest, but little experience, in
industrial and applied micropaleontology.

Additional Information and further program details are available at
http://www.Paleontology.uni-bonn.de/mitarbeiter/LANGER/INDEX.HTM
<http://www.Paleontology.uni-bonn.de/mitarbeiter/LANGER/INDEX.HTM>


COURSE OUTLINE:

Academic approaches to applied micropalaeontology

Historical background to applied micropalaeontology

Drilling a Well
- Drilling Rigs
- The cutting system
- The mud system
- The history of a well from beginning to end
- Samples derived from drilling wells and their reliability for
micropaleontological analysis.

- Effects of cutting techniques on sample quality
- Effects of drilling materials on sample quality
- Additional sample degradation problems

- Adaptation of academic micropalaeontology to industry
- Traditional uses of micropalaeontology in hydrocarbon exploration.
- Working at Wellsite and in the laboratory: Techniques, problems and
examples

- Recent, high resolution applications and new approaches to applied
micropalaeontology
   including biosteering and reservoir characterisation by detailed
morphological
   analysis of microfaunas with examples

- Unconventional uses of micropalaeontology

Practical Work
- Checking the characteristics of sample
- Processing and analysing ditch cutting samples
- Real time wellsite micropalaeontology: analysis simulation

Horizontal Drilling
- Horizontal drilling from pre-spud to wellsite
- Horizontal drilling exercise

> From exploration to production - from theory to practice

Exploration
- Seismic stratigraphy (including pitfalls)
- Seismic stratigraphy exercise

Exploration / Discovery
- Bio-Sequence stratigraphy
- exercise: well to seismic, identification of surfaces

Appraisal
- exercise: second well, tie to first well and seismic
- exercise: third well, log correlation, compare result with 
biostratigraphy

Graphic correlation as a tool
  - exercise

Building a reservoir zonation
  - exercise: horizontal drilling

Carbonate production in present-day oceans
- Larger Foraminifera as Carbonate Reservoirs
- Recognizing foraminiferal reservoirs
- Practical Case Study: Lagoon at Madang, Papua New Guinea
- Increasing Biostratigraphic Resolution with Molecular Biology

The future of Industrial and Applied Micropaleontology


Instructors:

Dr. David Jutson is an industrial micropaleontologist with more than 20
years experience in the oil industry during which he has worked for
international oil exploration companies, government geological surveys 
and
biostratigraphic consultants. He currently works for RWE-Dea at their
research laboratory at Wietze, Niedersachsen. He has worked extensively 
at
wellsite in the North Sea, onshore Europe and Angola. He retains his 
links
with research and academia and has recently published several papers 
with
subjects ranging from Lower Cretaceous microfaunas and nannofloras from
Denmark to Paleocene diatoms from the North Sea to Danian nannofossils 
from
Belgium.

Gitte V. Laursen is an industrial micropaleontologist with 8 years
experience in the industry with the Norwegian state oil company 
Statoil. She
is currently involved in, and supervising, the interpretation of
biostratigraphic data from contractors (Tertiary foraminifera, 
palynology
and nannofossils). Through the Statoil university programme, she keeps
contact with academic research and has recently published a paper on a
multidisciplinary approach to the interpretation of paleoenvironments.

Emma Sheldon is a biostratigrapher with the Geological Survey of 
Denmark and
Greenland (GEUS), working primarily with calcareous nannofossils and
foraminifera. She has undertaken research projects in the Danish, 
Norwegian
and Dutch sectors of the North Sea, onshore East Denmark, and onshore 
and
offshore West Greenland. She has also worked at wellsite as a consultant
industrial biostratigrapher for Amerada Hess, RWE-Dea and Mærsk. 
Currently,
she is carrying out research for her doctorate (Danian and Late 
Cretaceous
nannofossils).

Martin Langer is Professor of Micropaleontology at the University of 
Bonn.
He specializes in the evolutionary paleobiology, biogeography, carbonate
productivity, molecular evolution and biodiversity of foraminifera. His
interest in foraminifera has sustained over 10 years of research and 
field
work in the South Pacific, the North Atlantic, the Mediterranean Sea 
and the
Indo-Pacific. His current research concerns pathways of distributions in
both ecological and evolutionary time-frames and the development of
foraminiferal proxies as prognostic tools to assess future changes
associated with predicted patterns of climate change.




Registration:

Participants can register by sending an e-mail to 
david.jutson@rwedea.com
<mailto:david.jutson@rwedea.com>  . Final registration will be accepted
after course fees have been received.

Course Fees:

50 Euro (Students) / 150 Euros (Professionals)

Prof. Martin Langer
Postbank Karlsruhe (Germany)
Account Nr.: 30983759
BLZ: 66010075

Additional Information and further program details are available at
http://www.Paleontology.uni-bonn.de/mitarbeiter/LANGER/INDEX.HTM
<http://www.Paleontology.uni-bonn.de/mitarbeiter/LANGER/INDEX.HTM>


Accommodation

Housing can be arranged on request by sending an e-mail to:
martin.langer@uni-bonn.de Course fees do not cover accommodation, 
insurance
or travel expenses. Closing date for registration: 25 May 2003



Additional Information

Bonn - The City of Science

The city of Bonn looks back on 2000 years of history. Since the 2nd 
decade
B.C. the Romans settled in this part of the Rhineland calling it "Castra
Bonnensis". "Its location on the great main road along the Rhine river 
also
meant witnessing turbulent events since the Roman days and many 
historical
events influenced today's townscape including its university. The 
Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-University was founded in 1818 by King Friedrich 
Wilhelm
III, who ruled the Rhineland as part of Prussia from 1815. The 
Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-University Bonn is among the largest universities in
Germany. It ranks as third largest university in the State of 
North-Rhine
Westphalia, with around 38,000 students. As part of its decision on 20th
June 1991 to move Parliament and parts of the Government from Bonn to 
Berlin
an advisory group headed by the then Chancellor Dr. Helmut Kohl had 
agreed
upon compensation and to make "Bonn a research region". In the modern 
city's
streets of Bonn, on pleasant old markets, stores, pedestrian malls, 
parks
and in the handsome Südstadt residential area, life is unhurried by the
standard of larger cities. You can enjoy a glass of wine in the shadow 
of an
old gate, in front of the baroque facade of the old town hall or at
Beethoven's feet.

_____________________________________________________
Dr. David Jutson,
E & P Research Laboratory Wietze
Industrie Str.2
D - 29323 WIETZE
Tel.:  +49 - (0)5146 - 89285
Fax:  +49 - (0)5146 - 89275
E-mail:  david.jutson@rwedea.com
_____________________________________________________