Depth well matching in 3D meshing

You can use the Depth Well Matching tool of the 3D Mesh strip (Model > 3D Mesh > Tools > Depth Well Matching) to correct mismatches between the horizon surfaces in your 3D Mesh Structural Model and the well markers. You may use the tool at various stages during the Surface Meshing workflow, directly after assigning data to check the input data, and after each step that modifies the surfaces (e.g. the Create Boundary step when applying an area box, or the Set Element Sizes step when refining the mesh). Also, mismatches may be introduced when using the tools in the Tools section of the 3D Mesh strip, e.g. when trying to resolve flat triangles or other issues. All these processes impact the triangles of the surfaces and may cause small mismatches which you can resolve with the depth well matching tool.

With the depth well matching in the Tools section of the 3D Mesh strip you can only well match the surfaces of stratigraphic events (i.e. horizons, unconformities and intrusions), not faults.

The tool calculates the mismatches between markers and surfaces and lists them as residuals in the residual table on the form. The residual values are interpolated between the markers to create the correction distance. You can find the correction distance as a property, called residual property (WM Residual), in the Jewel Explorer, under the tri-meshes of the surfaces in the 3D Mesh Structural Model. For QC purposes, you can open a dedicated well matching view and visualize the correction distance together with the mismatches. You can use the table to set the focus in the view on one mismatch at a time. It is recommended to review these values before applying the well matching.

By applying well matching, the surface shifts in space to align with the marker location. The boundaries of the tri-meshes are fixed in place to ensure watertightness of the 3D Mesh Structural Model is maintained. In the Jewel Explorer the matched surfaces will overwrite the surfaces in the 3D Mesh Structural Model.