Basin Analysis Petroleum Geology Poster Instructions

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BASIN ANALYSIS AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY COURSEWORK DEADLINE: 11 am THURSDAY 19 TH MARCH 2015 Your task is to produce a poster for the above deadline. It will count for 40% of the marks for the unit. You will present your posters during a session in BK 3.06 from 11:00-14:00 on Thursday the 19 th of March 2015. Your posters will be collected at the end of the session. Posters should contain approximately 1000-1500 words. The topic of the poster will be the sedimentary and structural development of a particular petroleum-bearing basin. Each poster should include a summary of the basin history. Other information/sections that you may want to include could cover: introduction; basin setting; origin and nature of the source rocks; migration pathway; nature of the reservoir rocks; the type of seal and trap; structural history in relation to timing of key events in the formation of the petroleum play, etc. Your poster should be illustrated using (for example): structural cross sections; sedimentary and well logs; stratigraphic columns; deep crustal seismic images, etc. Posters should be no larger than A1. They may be prepared using vector graphics packages such as CorelDraw or Adobe Illustrator. During the poster session, all groups will be required to be present their posters and must come prepared to answer questions on their poster – this forms part of the assessment! Examples of posters from other units are displayed on the walls of the corridors in SEES. __________________________________________________________________________ How to produce a good poster Structure Like other types of academic writing, an academic poster should be well organised, with clear headings and subheadings. Sections that you may want to include for this specific task could cover: introduction; basin setting; origin and nature of the source rocks; migration pathway; nature of the reservoir rocks; the type of seal and trap; structural history in relation to timing of key events in the formation of the petroleum play, etc. Poster design Once you’ve identified your main content and structure, you need to identify the graphics and formatting which will communicate your message best. How will you organise your content visually? How might you use colour and type to enhance visual impact? It is usually best to design from the outside in, thinking about the general purpose before the details.

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Basin analysis poster instructions. how to right about a sedimentary basin.

Transcript of Basin Analysis Petroleum Geology Poster Instructions

  • BASIN ANALYSIS AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY COURSEWORK

    DEADLINE: 11 am THURSDAY 19TH MARCH 2015

    Your task is to produce a poster for the above deadline. It will count for 40% of the marks for the unit. You will present your posters during a session in BK 3.06 from 11:00-14:00 on Thursday the 19th of March 2015. Your posters will be collected at the end of the session. Posters should contain approximately 1000-1500 words.

    The topic of the poster will be the sedimentary and structural development of a particular petroleum-bearing basin.

    Each poster should include a summary of the basin history. Other information/sections that you may want to include could cover: introduction; basin setting; origin and nature of the source rocks; migration pathway; nature of the reservoir rocks; the type of seal and trap; structural history in relation to timing of key events in the formation of the petroleum play, etc. Your poster should be illustrated using (for example): structural cross sections; sedimentary and well logs; stratigraphic columns; deep crustal seismic images, etc. Posters should be no larger than A1. They may be prepared using vector graphics packages such as CorelDraw or Adobe Illustrator. During the poster session, all groups will be required to be present their posters and must come prepared to answer questions on their poster this forms part of the assessment! Examples of posters from other units are displayed on the walls of the corridors in SEES.

    __________________________________________________________________________

    How to produce a good poster

    Structure Like other types of academic writing, an academic poster should be well organised, with clear headings and subheadings. Sections that you may want to include for this specific task could cover: introduction; basin setting; origin and nature of the source rocks; migration pathway; nature of the reservoir rocks; the type of seal and trap; structural history in relation to timing of key events in the formation of the petroleum play, etc. Poster design Once youve identified your main content and structure, you need to identify the graphics and formatting which will communicate your message best. How will you organise your content visually? How might you use colour and type to enhance visual impact? It is usually best to design from the outside in, thinking about the general purpose before the details.

  • Visual impact Posters are designed to convey a message quickly and efficiently. What should your viewer see and understand first?

    1. Think what will communicate your key points most clearly 2. Find a focal point that will help draw your viewers in. This might be a key flowchart or

    diagram, or simply a clear main title 3. Make sure important graphics or information stand out clearly in your design 4. Remember, you may not need graphics if words are most powerful

    Layout What visual arrangement will suit your content best, and how you lead the reader through it?

    1. Try to provide a clear entry point for readers, and a logical visual flow 2. Group related information 3. Use numbering or arrows if linked content should be read in a particular order 4. Avoid either oversimplifying (too little useful information) or overcomplicating (too

    much information) 5. Use negative space and margins to give your content room to breathe 6. Once the basic layout is planned you can consider graphic and test formatting in

    more detail 7. A poster should be legible from about one meter, and attract interest from about five

    meters 8. For clarity, use a sans-serif font like Arial or Helvetica. Make sure there is good

    contrast between text and background 9. To be legible at a distance, the main title should be around 70-100 points,

    subheadings around 40 points, body of text around 24 points 10. Format headings and subheading consistently. This helps structure your information

    visually Use of graphics An academic poster should be both professional and concise, so a general rule is only to include graphics that really support your content.

    1. Use diagrams, graphs or flowcharts to help explain complex information visually 2. Try not to use too many different or strongly contrasting colours. A limited colour

    palette can be very effective 3. Avoid using unnecessary and distracting background textures or decoration 4. If your topic has a central statement, graphics or diagram, make this prominent in

    your design. Dont hide it in a corner 5. Every graph should have a purpose

    Referencing When researching the content for your poster, you should be focussing on the primary scientific literature. Web resources such as Wikipedia are ok for doing basic searches (but remember that not everything on the internet is accurate) and then you should follow-up the links that they have to the original sources. Google Scholar, Web of Science etc. are recommended as search engines for primary scientific literature. Sources should be referenced in the text and a reference list provided (this is not included in your word count). To save words and space, you may wish use the use the superscript numbering style of referencing for within the text.