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How to Contour A Map
| Geologists make all kinds
of contour maps. Contouring is not hard, but it takes lots of
practice and patience to make a nice-looking map.
(1) You start by "spotting", or
drawing, all the
wells on a map. You would need to know
the distance of each well from a common boundary (the section line, in
this case). In
a large part of the United States, the Township
and Range System is used to spot wells. This system is part of
the Public Land Survey, that was established when the country was young.
Let's assume we are making a map in one the
western states that uses the Township and Range system. In this
area, a "section" of land is one mile on each side (one mile
square). This also happens to be exactly 640 acres.
Here's a section of land to the right, with
our wells spotted on it.
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(2) Next, you look at the electric
logs for
each well. We are going to make an "isopach" (eye-so-pak)
map. An isopach map is a map that shows the thickness of something.
In this case, it is the thickness of a sandstone formation.
Count the number of feet of sand in the zone you are
interested in. Then, put the number of feet of sand below each well spot.
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(3) Start contouring with the highest values.
Start with a "contour interval" that is slightly less than the biggest
values. In this case, the first line drawn is the 40-foot contour.
As you draw your line, look carefully when you
pass between two wells. Try to use your eye like a "ruler", and
position the line at the proper distance between the two wells. Notice the
well with a footage of "38". Since 38 is very close to 40 (the
contour we are drawing, you should "pull" the 40-foot contour over
close to the 38-foot line, like I did here.
If there is a "40" on the map
(there is on this one), you will draw the 40-foot line right through that
well.
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(4) Now draw the 30-foot contour.
"Eyeball" the map and be sure to leave the proper amount of room for
the remaining contour lines. Use a pencil, because you have to erase a
lot!!
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(5) Finish the map by drawing the 20-foot,
10-foot, and zero contour lines. Label the "contour interval"
you used at the bottom of the map. In this case, the contour interval is
10 feet.
You're done! It takes quite a bit of
practice to draw decent contour maps by hand. The one we just did was a
"quickie". Normally, you would draw this in pencil and then go
back and make it better with ink.
It's important to know how to contour a map,
but these days, geologists use computers to do
a lot of their contouring. The computer can't do it all, however. It
still requires quite a bit of "help" from the petroleum geologist to
make a decent-looking map.
The little map above would still require a lot
of erasing and reworking to get it looking just right. When you're done,
the countours would look nice and even, like the map below:

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