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Coming in Oilfield Review NEW BOOKS Information from Formation Water. Analysis of formation water is a critical step in hydrocarbon exploration and production. It helps assess potential for corrosion and scaling, provides input to petrophysical evaluation and aids in the understanding of reservoir connectivity. This article explains the causes of variation in formation water chemistry and describes methods for collecting pure water samples and evaluating them downhole and in surface laboratories. The Grand Design Offshore Pipelines. In response to maturing production in established onshore and shallow-water basins, many E&P companies are extending their quest for reserves toward deeper offshore prospects. Pipeline companies, in turn, must keep pace with this push into deeper environments. The many pipeline design considerations have a direct bearing on operation and maintenance practices. This article provides a broad overview of offshore pipeline construction, operations and monitoring activities. Dielectric Logging. Dielectric logging tools, introduced to the oil and gas industry in the late 1970s, operate at frequencies in the microwave range. They provide supplemental information for analyzing freshwater reservoirs and identifying movable hydrocarbons, which is helpful in characterizing heavy-oil reservoirs. A new logging tool offers a dielectric dispersion measurement that petrophysicists can use to evaluate rock texture in carbonates and shale effects in siliciclastics. This article describes dielectric measurements, including dispersion, and their applications. Case studies from freshwater, heavy-oil and carbonate reservoirs are included. Managed Pressure Drilling. As the length of horizontal wells continues to increase, limits—once a consequence of accepted safe drilling practices—are being swept aside. By lowering equivalent circulating density, operators are able to cross both virgin, pressured sands and mature, depleted zones with the same wellbore on their way to untapped reserves. This article discusses the relatively new automated managed pressure drilling tool and its ability to drill wells once deemed technologically or economically impossible. 52 38607schD8R1.indd 1 Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow Bantam Books, an imprint of Random House Publishing, Inc. 1745 Broadway New York, New York 10019 USA 2010. 198 pages. US$ 28.00 ISBN: 978-0-553-80537-6 Theoretical physicists Hawking and Mlodinow discuss theories of quantum mechanics and relativity and how they shape our understanding of the origins of our universe. They further propose that the Milky Way is just one of billions of galaxies, each with its own set of laws of nature. This Multiverse or M-theory— the theory of everything—they posit, is the unified theory that Einstein pursued. Contents: • The Mystery of Being • The Rule of Law • What Is Reality? • Alternative Histories • The Theory of Everything • Choosing Our Universe • The Apparent Miracle • The Grand Design • Glossary, Index The Grand Design . . . attempts to outline . . . a complete scenario for the nature of the universe and our place in it. . . . Whether this ambitious conception is actually correct remains unclear. It’s not especially idiosyncratic; many theorists hold similar views of the multiverse and the anthropic principle. The important lesson of The Grand Design is not so much the particular theory being advocated but the sense that science may be able to answer the deep ‘Why?’ questions that are part of fundamental human curiosity. Carroll S: “The ‘Why?’ Questions, Chapter and Multiverse,” The Wall Street Journal (September 24, 2010), http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240 52748704358904575477583868227458.html (accessed January 3, 2011). The Planet in a Pebble: A Journey into Earth’s Deep History Jan Zalasiewicz Oxford University Press 198 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10016 USA 2010. 234 pages. US$ 27.95 ISBN: 978-0-19-956970-0 Science at the Nanoscale: An Introductory Textbook Chin Wee Shong, Sow Chorng Haur and Andrew T.S. Wee Pan Stanford Publishing Pte. Ltd. Penthouse Level, Suntec Tower 3 8 Temasek Boulevard Singapore 038988 2010. 214 pages. US$ 88.00 ISBN: 978-981-4241-03-8 Starting with a slate pebble found on a beach in Wales, the author engages the reader in a discussion of the grandeur of time, physics and stellar matter. Through an exploration of the science of paleogeology, Zalasiewicz offers the reader an understanding of the origins of the universe, creation of oil fields and the nature of vanished oceans. Contents: • Stardust • From the Depths of the Earth • Distant Lands • To the Rendezvous • The Sea • Ghosts Observed • Ghosts in Absentia • Where on Earth? • Gold! • The Oil Window • Making Mountains • Breaking the Surface • Futures • Further Reading, Bibliography, Index . . . Common elements and atomic rarities, microfossils and ticking radio-isotopes all make an appearance . . . [in The Planet in a Pebble]. It builds to a satisfying picture of how our planet’s history is etched into every fragment of the pebble. Zalasiewicz has a clear style, with some nice lyrical touches. His story is a celebration of the astonishing ways geologists have found of sampling stone’s secrets. Geology has a gifted new popular science writer. This textbook, targeted at the undergraduate level, introduces the principles of nanoscience—the underpinnings of nanotechnology. The book examines atomic, molecular and solid-state physics as well as chemistry as they relate to and define nanotechnologies. A companion Web site provides solutions to chapter problems. Contents: • Introduction and Historical Perspective • Classical Physics at the Nanoscale • Brief Review of Quantum Mechanics •F rom Atoms and Molecules to Nanoscale Materials • Surfaces at the Nanoscale • Low-Dimensional Nanostructures •F ormation and Self-Assembly at the Nanoscale • Nanotools and Nanofabrication • Future Trends • Index Science at the Nanoscale is a valuable introductory course resource. . . . In a certain way, the book might be too introductory, since . . . [the authors] . . . cover many basic physical and chemical principles in some detail, and not all of this content specifically relates to nanotechnology. However, the authors’ approach will allow less experienced readers to follow the presented concepts. Giesche H: Choice 48, no. 4 (December 2010): 705. Turney J: New Scientist 207, no. 2778 (September 18, 2010): 47. Oilfield Review 2/21/11 10:21 PM the science behind ocean current models such as the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt as a trigger to explain the mystery of the Earth’s intermittent pattern of global ice ages. . . . Anyone who has walked on a beach, thrown a snowball, or flown over the ocean will be fascinated by this excellent book geared to undergraduate scientists and the general public. Gordon ID: Choice 48, no. 1 (September 2010): 124–125. Massive: The Missing Particle That Sparked the Greatest Hunt in Science Ian Sample Basic Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group 387 Park Avenue South New York, New York 10016 USA 2010. 260 pages. US$ 25.95 The Great Ocean Conveyor: Discovering the Trigger for Abrupt Climate Change Wally Broecker Princeton University Press 41 William Street Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA 2010. 172 pages. US$ 27.95 ISBN: 978-0-691-14354-5 ISBN: 978-0-465-01947-2 The author explores the search for the fundamental particle called the Higgs boson. The book describes the world science climate in the decades leading to 1964, when Peter Higgs developed the theory, and ends with present-day work at the world’s particle accelerators, which have yet to isolate the Higgs boson particle. Contents: • Long Road to Princeton • Shadow of the Bomb • Seventy-Nine Lines • The Enchanted Prince • An Earnest Revenge • Reagan’s Renegade • Massive Maggie • The End Is Not Nigh • The Gordian Knot • Chasing the Wind • Hidden World • Notes, Bibliography, Index Ian Sample . . . shows a keen eye for the personal equation even while narrating large swatches of physics history. . . . Mr. Sample’s exciting, easy-to-read narrative captures the collaboration, and competition, among the theorists who became involved in the search [for the Higgs particle] over the decades. Pesic P: The Wall Street Journal (November 13, 2010), http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424 052748704141104575588230844156338.html (accessed January 6, 2011). The author, a leading authority on sudden global climate change, explores how our planet’s climate can abruptly change based on fluxes and shutdowns of what he terms the ‘Great Ocean Conveyor.’ Broecker traces the evolution of the science, describing how researchers work to probe the Earth’s past and how they combine their findings with the newest technologies to try to predict the future of climate change. Contents: • The Setting • A Surprise • The Villain • Puzzles • Hot Clues • The Solution • A Confirmation • The Last Hurrah • Holocene Wobbles • The Anthropocene • Glossary, Supplementary Readings, Index Wally Broecker is one of the great pioneers of paleoclimatology, the study of past climate changes in Earth’s history. He introduced the term global warming and, in the 1980s, proposed the global oceancirculating system, which he dubbed the Great Ocean Conveyor. . . . In The Great Ocean Conveyor, Broecker offers a history of his thinking on the topic. Relating his breakthroughs and setbacks, he portrays science as a ‘continual struggle to understand more fully and more accurately how the world really works.’ Rahmstorf S: Nature 464, no. 7829 (April 1, 2010): 681. In his latest book, . . . Broecker investigates how the ocean’s vast network of currents drives abrupt climate change. The author explores Winter 2010/2011 38607schD8R1.indd 2 • We All Have Our Faults • The Bad One • Whither Earthquake Prediction? •N otes, Index, Index of Earthquakes by Year . . . a comprehensive, broadly accessible, and readable overview of the ups and (mostly) downs of earthquake prediction over the past 50 years. . . . Hough raises the thorny questions of what responsibilities the seismologist has with respect to conveying warnings and how civil authorities should treat predictions. . . . [T]he author steers a balanced, fair, and measured course between optimism and pessimism. Anyone who wants to know why earthquakes are still unpredictable will find the answer here. Musson R: Physics Today 63, no. 11 (November 2010): 46–47. Predicting the Unpredictable: The Tumultuous Science of Earthquake Prediction Susan Hough Princeton University Press 41 William Street Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA 2010. 272 pages. US$ 24.95 There is something for everyone in Predicting the Unpredictable, whether they are seismologists, students or senators. Even the nutcases will benefit from Hough’s tactful discussions in this masterly summary of why we cannot predict earthquakes. Bilham R: Nature 463, no. 7282 (February 11, 2010): 735. ISBN: 978-0-691-13816-9 Geophysicist Susan Hough explores the vagaries of earthquake prediction through the failures and apparent successes of earlier predictions, and describes why predicting the unpredictable is such a challenge. From the laboratory to the field, Hough examines the fact, fiction and pseudoscience of earthquake prediction, including unusual earthquake prediction theories and why they have not held up, even when occasionally accurate. Contents: • Ready to Rumble • Ready to Explode • Irregular Clocks • The Hayward Fault • Predicting the Unpredictable • The Road to Haicheng • Percolation • The Heyday • The Hangover • Highly Charged Debates • Reading the Tea Leaves • Accelerating Moment Release • On the Fringe • Complicity • Measles 53 2/21/11 10:22 PM