Cooperative Inversion of Geophysical Data
Larry Lines, Alton K. Schultz, Sven Treitel
Geophysical inversion by iterative modeling involves a fitting of
observations by the adjustment of model parameters. Both seismic and potential
field model responses can be influenced by the adjustment of the rock property
parameters and the adjustment of rock-layer boundaries. The objective of this
"cooperative inversion" is to obtain a model consistent with all available
surface and borehole geophysical data sets. Although the inversion of real
geophysical data is always nonunique and ambiguous, we can lessen the degree of
ambiguity by inverting
all available surface and borehole data. In general, the
cooperative inversion of these various types of data provided model responses
that satisfied all data sets. This concept is illustrated by a case history in
which surface seismic data, sonic logs, vertical seismic profiles (VSP), surface
gravity data, and borehole gravity meter (BHGM) data were adequately modeled by
using least squares inversion in conjunction with a series of forward modeling
steps.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91035©1988 AAPG-SEPM-SEG
Pacific Sections and SPWLA Annual Convention, Santa Barbara, California, 17-19 April 1988.