
Wednesday, December 5, 2007: 10:00 a.m.-11:20 a.m. | |||
224 E (Orange County Convention Center) | |||
Optimizing Well Design with Borehole Logging Technologies - Topical Session, 2.0 CEPs | |||
Borehole logging technologies can help optimize well design and performance, whether designing a production, injection, or monitoring well completed in unconsolidated materials or in rock. The most important types of information necessary for appropriately designing a well are the locations of producing zones, the water quality in different aquifer units, and the thicknesses, permeability, and storativity of the aquifer units. | |||
Moderator: | Wendy Wempe, Ph.D., Schlumberger Water Services | ||
10:00 a.m. | Combining Impeller Logging and Borehole Dilution to Characterize a Fractured Aquifer: A Case Study on the Chalk of East Yorkshire, United Kingdom Alison H. Parker, L. Jared West, Noelle E. Odling and Simon H. Bottrell, University of Leeds | ||
10:20 a.m. | Innovative Cost-Effective Ground Water Monitoring Well Design Thomas D. Dalzell, CWD, AMS, Mark Kram, Ph.D., ESM, CGWP, U.S. Navy and Jeffrey A. Farrar, M.S., PE, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation | ||
10:40 a.m. | Integrated Flow and Fluid-Property Logging for Well Evaluation and Flow-Zone Characterization in Carbonate-Bedrock Aquifers John H. Williams, USGS |
2007 NGWA Ground Water Expo and Annual Meeting