A practical primer on geostatistics (ver0 1.4, December 2018): U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2009-1103

  • Olea R
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Abstract

THE CHALLENGE Most geological phenomena are extraordinarily complex in their interrelationships and vast in their geographical extension. Ordinarily, engineers and geoscientists are faced with corporate or scientific requirements to properly prepare geological models with measurements involving a small fraction of the entire area or volume of interest. Exact description of a system such as an oil reservoir is neither feasible nor economically possible. The results are necessarily uncertain. Note that the uncertainty is not an intrinsic property of the systems; it is the result of incomplete knowledge by the observer. THE AIM OF GEOSTATISTICS The main objective of geostatistics is the characterization of spatial systems that are incompletely known, systems that are common in geology. A key difference from classical statistics is that geostatistics uses the sampling location of every measurement. Unless the measurements show spatial correlation, the application of geostatistics is pointless. Ordinarily the need for additional knowledge goes beyond a few points, which explains the display of results graphically as fishnet plots, block diagrams, and maps.

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Olea, R. A. (2018). A practical primer on geostatistics (ver0 1.4, December 2018): U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2009-1103. U.S. Geological Survey (p. 346). Retrieved from http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2009/1103/

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