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Geology 5660/6660 Applied Geophysics 19 Feb 2014 © A.R. Lowry 2014 For Fri 21 Feb: Burger 200-253 (§4.4-4.7) Last Time: Reflection Data Processing Step.

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Presentation on theme: "Geology 5660/6660 Applied Geophysics 19 Feb 2014 © A.R. Lowry 2014 For Fri 21 Feb: Burger 200-253 (§4.4-4.7) Last Time: Reflection Data Processing Step."— Presentation transcript:

1 Geology 5660/6660 Applied Geophysics 19 Feb 2014 © A.R. Lowry 2014 For Fri 21 Feb: Burger 200-253 (§4.4-4.7) Last Time: Reflection Data Processing Step IV : Migration return reflection energy to its “true” location on the two-way travel-time image… Depth migration uses velocity structure from NMO correction to convert travel time to depth (improving image resolution; removing e.g. velocity pull-ups/pull-downs) Sometimes additional steps as well:  Amplitude adjustments  Frequency adjustments  Transmission adjustments  Depth Migration (The latter especially is important for velocity effects!) Seismic Reflection Interpretation Data collection: Huge quantities of data! Redundancy is key! 2D profiling still used for initial reconnaissance, but 3D is industry standard for prospects

2 Haakon Fossen 2010 2D Seismic Data 2D lines are long profiles that are processed independently Generally collected now for regional reconnaissance studies Covers large areas and gives an overall picture of the geology

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5 Deep seismic profiling Imaging depth range from 0-50 km Strongest & most continuous impedance contrasts below sedimentary cover are lithologic changes ~mid-crust and at the Moho

6 Haakon Fossen 2010 Other reflectivity within crystalline crust can relate to lithologic changes (e.g. across a low-angle normal fault) but also often represents mineral alignment in ductile shear zones

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8 Better resolution Better positioning 3D view options 3-D seismic cubes

9 Haakon Fossen 2010 3D seismic 3D data: collected by shooting many parallel lines ~25 m apart migrated together to increase accuracy and to create a coherent data volume (cube) collected over all offshore oil and gas fields underpin the geometric understanding of an oil field

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11 Data acquisition

12 Haakon Fossen 2010 Resolution Vertical Lateral

13 Haakon Fossen 2010 Vertical resolution Relationship between bed thickness and acoustic impedance contrast for seismic resolution of a layer. Vertical seismic resolution in terms of tuning thickness: When top to base of a layer is less than 1/4 wavelength, constructive/destructive interference results in apparent single wavelet.

14 Haakon Fossen 2010 Color convention: Blue for positive amplitude, red for negative…

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18 Lateral positioning Choice of migration velocities affects horizontal positioning of signals Horizontal resolution typically 50-100 m Serious concern when drilling high-precision wells, e.g. close to faults. Resolution may depend heavily on pilot wells

19 Haakon Fossen 2010 Directional drilling/steering technology is another reason for accurate depth migration!

20 Haakon Fossen 2010 Seismic quality Depends on: Acoustic impedance contrast Depth (  frequency) Layer thickness (  interference) Properties of overlying layers Source energy Processing parameters Acquisition direction Instrumentation


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