Skip to main content

Read/write well data from Log ASCII Standard (LAS) files

Project description

PyPI Version PyPI Downloads Build Status Coverage Status GitHub Issues GitHub PRs Python Version PyPI Format MIT License

This is a Python package to read and write Log ASCII Standard (LAS) files, used for borehole/well data (e.g. geophysical/geological/petrophysical logs). It is compatible with versions 1.2 and 2.0 of the LAS file specification, published by the Canadian Well Logging Society. In principle it is designed to read as many types of LAS files as possible, including ones containing common errors or non-compliant formatting.

It is written entirely in Python and works on any platform. It depends on the following packages available on PyPI:

Install

To install from PyPI use:

$ pip install lasio

If necessary this will download and install the package dependencies listed above.

Alternatively if you would like the latest version (which may contain bugs and errors) make sure you have setuptools and git installed and then use:

$ git clone https://github.com/kinverarity1/lasio.git
$ cd lasio
$ python setup.py develop

How to use

Look at the example IPython notebooks here. More detailed examples are coming.

Opening LAS files

To open a LAS file from disk:

>>> import lasio
>>> l = lasio.read("sample_big.las")

To open a LAS file from a URL:

>>> l = lasio.read("http://someplace.com/example.las")

Getting curve data

>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> pprint(l.curves)
[Curve(mnemonic=u'DEPT', unit=u'M', value=u'', descr=u'1  DEPTH', data=array([ 1670.   ,  1669.875,  1669.75 , ...,  1669.75 ,  1670.   , 1669.875])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'DT', unit=u'US/M', value=u'', descr=u'2  SONIC TRANSIT TIME', data=array([ 123.45,  123.45,  123.45, ...,  123.45,  123.45,  123.45])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'RHOB', unit=u'K/M3', value=u'', descr=u'3  BULK DENSITY', data=array([ 2550.,  2550.,  2550., ...,  2550.,  2550.,  2550.])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'NPHI', unit=u'V/V', value=u'', descr=u'4   NEUTRON POROSITY', data=array([ 0.45,  0.45,  0.45, ...,  0.45,  0.45,  0.45])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'SFLU', unit=u'OHMM', value=u'', descr=u'5  RXO RESISTIVITY', data=array([ 123.45,  123.45,  123.45, ...,  123.45,  123.45,  123.45])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'SFLA', unit=u'OHMM', value=u'', descr=u'6  SHALLOW RESISTIVITY', data=array([ 123.45,  123.45,  123.45, ...,  123.45,  123.45,  123.45])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'ILM', unit=u'OHMM', value=u'', descr=u'7  MEDIUM RESISTIVITY', data=array([ 110.2,  110.2,  110.2, ...,  110.2,  110.2,  110.2])),
 Curve(mnemonic=u'ILD', unit=u'OHMM', value=u'', descr=u'8  DEEP RESISTIVITY', data=array([ 105.6,  105.6,  105.6, ...,  105.6,  105.6,  105.6]))]
>>> for curve in l.curves:
...     print("%s\t[%s]\t%s\t%s" % (
...         curve.mnemonic, curve.unit, curve.value, curve.descr))
...
DEPT    [M]             1  DEPTH
DT      [US/M]          2  SONIC TRANSIT TIME
RHOB    [K/M3]          3  BULK DENSITY
NPHI    [V/V]           4   NEUTRON POROSITY
SFLU    [OHMM]          5  RXO RESISTIVITY
SFLA    [OHMM]          6  SHALLOW RESISTIVITY
ILM     [OHMM]          7  MEDIUM RESISTIVITY
ILD     [OHMM]          8  DEEP RESISTIVITY

And if all you want is the curve data itself it’s accessible as items of the LASFile object:

>>> l["SFLU"]
array([ 123.45,  123.45,  123.45, ...,  123.45,  123.45,  123.45])
>>> l["DEPT"]
array([ 1670.   ,  1669.875,  1669.75 , ...,  1669.75 ,  1670.   , 1669.875])

Reading header information

Header information is parsed into simple HeaderItem objects, and stored in a dictionary for each section of the header:

>>> l = lasio.read("sample_big.las")
>>> l.version
{'VERS': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'VERS', unit=u'', value=1.2, descr=u'CWLS LOG ASCII STANDARD -VERSION 1.2'),
 'WRAP': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'WRAP', unit=u'', value=u'NO', descr=u'ONE LINE PER DEPTH STEP')}
>>> l.well
{'STRT': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'STRT', unit=u'M', value=1670.0, descr=u''),
 'STOP': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'STOP', unit=u'M', value=1660.0, descr=u''),
 'STEP': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'STEP', unit=u'M', value=-0.125, descr=u''),
 'NULL': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'NULL', unit=u'', value=-999.25, descr=u''),
 'COMP': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'COMP', unit=u'', value=u'ANY OIL COMPANY LTD.', descr=u'COMPANY'),
 'WELL': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'WELL', unit=u'', value=u'ANY ET AL OIL WELL #12', descr=u'WELL'),
 'FLD': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'FLD', unit=u'', value=u'EDAM', descr=u'FIELD'),
 'LOC': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'LOC', unit=u'', value=u'A9-16-49-20W3M', descr=u'LOCATION'),
 'PROV': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'PROV', unit=u'', value=u'SASKATCHEWAN', descr=u'PROVINCE'),
 'SRVC': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'SRVC', unit=u'', value=u'ANY LOGGING COMPANY LTD.', descr=u'SERVICE COMPANY'),
 'DATE': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'DATE', unit=u'', value=u'25-DEC-1988', descr=u'LOG DATE'),
 'UWI': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'UWI', unit=u'', value=u'100091604920W300', descr=u'UNIQUE WELL ID')}
>>> l.params
{'BHT': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'BHT', unit=u'DEGC', value=35.5, descr=u'BOTTOM HOLE TEMPERATURE'),
 'BS': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'BS', unit=u'MM', value=200.0, descr=u'BIT SIZE'),
 'FD': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'FD', unit=u'K/M3', value=1000.0, descr=u'FLUID DENSITY'),
 'MATR': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'MATR', unit=u'', value=0.0, descr=u'NEUTRON MATRIX(0=LIME,1=SAND,2=DOLO)'),
 'MDEN': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'MDEN', unit=u'', value=2710.0, descr=u'LOGGING MATRIX DENSITY'),
 'RMF': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'RMF', unit=u'OHMM', value=0.216, descr=u'MUD FILTRATE RESISTIVITY'),
 'DFD': HeaderItem(mnemonic=u'DFD', unit=u'K/M3', value=1525.0, descr=u'DRILL FLUID DENSITY')}

The ~Other section is stored as free text:

>>> l.other
u'Note: The logging tools became stuck at 625 meters causing the data\nbetween 625 meters and 615 meters to be invalid.'

The actual values are stored as the value attribute:

>>> l.well["UWI"].value
u'100091604920W300'
>>> l.well["DATE"].value
u'25-DEC-1988'
>>> l.params["BHT"].value
35.5

Creating a LAS file from scratch

First create an empty LASFile object:

>>> l = lasio.LASFile()
>>> l.header
{'~V': {'VERS': HeaderItem(mnemonic='VERS', unit='', value=2.0, descr='CWLS log ASCII Standard -VERSION 2.0'),
 'WRAP': HeaderItem(mnemonic='WRAP', unit='', value='NO', descr='One line per depth step'),
 'DLM': HeaderItem(mnemonic='DLM', unit='', value='SPACE', descr='Column Data Section Delimiter')},
 '~W': {'STRT': HeaderItem(mnemonic='STRT', unit='m', value=nan, descr='START DEPTH'),
 'STOP': HeaderItem(mnemonic='STOP', unit='m', value=nan, descr='STOP DEPTH'),
 'STEP': HeaderItem(mnemonic='STEP', unit='m', value=nan, descr='STEP'),
 'NULL': HeaderItem(mnemonic='NULL', unit='', value=-9999.25, descr='NULL VALUE'),
 'COMP': HeaderItem(mnemonic='COMP', unit='', value='', descr='COMPANY'),
 'WELL': HeaderItem(mnemonic='WELL', unit='', value='', descr='WELL'),
 'FLD': HeaderItem(mnemonic='FLD', unit='', value='', descr='FIELD'),
 'LOC': HeaderItem(mnemonic='LOC', unit='', value='', descr='LOCATION'),
 'PROV': HeaderItem(mnemonic='PROV', unit='', value='', descr='PROVINCE'),
 'CNTY': HeaderItem(mnemonic='CNTY', unit='', value='', descr='COUNTY'),
 'STAT': HeaderItem(mnemonic='STAT', unit='', value='', descr='STATE'),
 'CTRY': HeaderItem(mnemonic='CTRY', unit='', value='', descr='COUNTRY'),
 'SRVC': HeaderItem(mnemonic='SRVC', unit='', value='', descr='SERVICE COMPANY'),
 'DATE': HeaderItem(mnemonic='DATE', unit='', value='', descr='DATE'),
 'UWI': HeaderItem(mnemonic='UWI', unit='', value='', descr='UNIQUE WELL ID'),
 'API': HeaderItem(mnemonic='API', unit='', value='', descr='API NUMBER')},
 '~C': [],
 '~P': {},
 '~O': }

Then let’s add some header items and curve data:

>>> import datetime
>>> l.well["DATE"].value = str(datetime.datetime.today())
>>> l.params["ENGI"] = lasio.HeaderItem("ENGI", "", "kinverarity@hotmail.com", "Creator of this file...")
>>> l.other = "Example of creating a LAS file from scratch using lasio"
>>> depth = [100, 100.5, 101, 101.5, 102]
>>> data = [5, 6, 9, 7, -9999.25]
>>> l.add_curve("DEPT", depth, unit="m")
>>> l.add_curve("DAT", data, descr="Made-up curve data for example")

Finally write the result (in this case to the console):

>>> import sys
>>> l.write(sys.stdout, version=2.0)
~Version ---------------------------------------------------
VERS.       2.0 : CWLS log ASCII Standard -VERSION 2.0
WRAP.        NO : One line per depth step
DLM .     SPACE : Column Data Section Delimiter
~Well ------------------------------------------------------
STRT.m                         100.0 : START DEPTH
STOP.m                         102.0 : STOP DEPTH
STEP.m                           0.5 : STEP
NULL.                       -9999.25 : NULL VALUE
COMP.                                : COMPANY
WELL.                                : WELL
FLD .                                : FIELD
LOC .                                : LOCATION
PROV.                                : PROVINCE
CNTY.                                : COUNTY
STAT.                                : STATE
CTRY.                                : COUNTRY
SRVC.                                : SERVICE COMPANY
DATE.     2015-08-09 17:12:52.371000 : DATE
UWI .                                : UNIQUE WELL ID
API .                                : API NUMBER
~Curves ----------------------------------------------------
DEPT.m      :
DAT .       : Made-up curve data for example
~Params ----------------------------------------------------
ENGI.     kinverarity@hotmail.com : Creator of this file...
~Other -----------------------------------------------------
Example of creating a LAS file from scratch using lasio
~ASCII -----------------------------------------------------
        100          5
      100.5          6
        101          9
      101.5          7
        102    -9999.2

Character encodings

Three options:

  1. Do nothing and hope for no errors.

  2. Specify the encoding (internally lasio uses the open function from codecs which is part of the standard library):

>>> l = lasio.read("example.las", encoding="windows-1252")
  1. Install a third-party package like cChardet (faster) or chardet (slower) to automatically detect the character encoding. If these packages are installed this code will use whichever is faster:

>>> l = lasio.read("example.las", autodetect_encoding=True)

Note that by default autodetect_encoding=False.

Development

  • 0.7 (2015-08-08) - all tests passing on Python 2.6 through 3.4

  • 0.6 (2015-08-05) - bugfixes and renamed from las_reader to lasio

  • 0.5 (2015-08-01) - Improvements to writing LAS files

  • 0.4 (2015-07-26) - Improved handling of character encodings, other internal improvements

  • 0.3 (2015-07-23) - Added Python 3 support, now reads LAS 1.2 and 2.0

  • 0.2 (2015-07-08) - Tidied code and published on PyPI

Contributions

Contributions are very welcome. Please fork the project on GitHub and submit a pull request (PR) containing any changes you have made.

Suggested improvements, bug reports, shortcomings, desirable features, examples of LAS files which do not load as you expected, are all also welcome either via GitHub or email.

Thanks to the following people in chronological order for their help:

  • @VelizarVESSELINOV

  • @diverdude

License

The code is freely available for any kind of use or modification under the MIT License.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distribution

lasio-0.7.3-py2.py3-none-any.whl (23.9 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page