No Dip or Low Dip?
James D. Morse
How does one distinguish between zero homoclinal dip (no dip) and low
homoclinal dip (low dip) using just the dipmeter tadpole plot? Because of
scatter, no-dip and low-dip settings both involve dip angles near zero that
cannot be distinguished on tadpole plots on the basis
of dip alone. They can,
however, be distinguished on the
basis
of azimuth: on the A plot (azimuth vs.
depth plot), no-dip settings show completely random azimuth distributions,
whereas low-dip settings show subtle concentrations of data at the true azimuth.
Once we have chosen, on the
basis
of the A-plot pattern, one of the two
settings, SCAT permits tests of this initial interpretation. No-dip and low-dip
patterns are usually different on DVA (dip vs. azimuth) and tangent plots; they
are almost always ifferent on azimuth-frequency histograms and on plots of
apparent dip vs. depth. Therefore, we can test our initial interpretation by
examining the actual patterns on these plots, with special emphasis on the last
two. This ability to test interpretations is made possible by SCAT's
multiple-display approach, an invaluable strength. In low-dip settings, the
tadpole plot does not clearly show the preferred azimuth that the A-plot
reveals. Moreover, the tadpole-plot approach provides no way to test
interpretations. Therefore, zero dip cannot confidently be distinguished from
low dip using the tadpole plot.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91030©1988 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, 20-23 March 1988.