Inference is not detection
A seismic survey returns the shape of the subsurface: layers, folds, faults, traps. What it cannot tell you is what fills those structures. Whether a promising trap holds oil, gas, water or nothing at all is read indirectly — from amplitudes, velocities and the geologist's experience.
That gap between structure and content is where dry holes are born. A perfect-looking structure can be empty, and a subtle one can be full.
Reading the molecular signature
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance responds to specific atomic nuclei. Every element of interest has its own resonance frequency, so when we tune to it, we are no longer interpreting a shape — we are detecting the substance directly, at depth.
If you can read the formula, you no longer have to bet on the geometry.
How the measurement is built
The signal starts from orbit. Multisensor satellite imaging captures the spectral response of the ground; a patented spectral transformation isolates the frequency of the target element; and a laboratory stage amplifies that response under controlled conditions. The result is presence, depth and concentration — not a guess.
What changes for you
- Confirm the presence — or absence — of hydrocarbons before committing capital.
- Discriminate hydrocarbons from water and CO₂, which look alike to structural methods.
- Detect a gas cap ahead of drilling, reducing blowout risk.
- Prioritise where to run seismic and where to drill, instead of surveying everything.
We don't replace seismic or drilling. We tell them where to look first — turning a broad, expensive search into a focused one.
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