Interpretive Lessons from Three-Dimensional
Finite-Difference Seismic
Models
Irshad R. Mufti
Finite-difference seismic
modeling is commonly done by treating the earth as
a two-dimensional medium and exciting the model with a line source. However, a
significant amount of reflected energy reaching the surface originates from the
subsurface features that are not confined to the
vertical
plane corresponding to
the direction of the
seismic
profile. Moreover, the drop in amplitude with
distance due to a line source is quite different from that due to a point
source. These problems have been investigated, with special reference to their
impact on the interpretation of data, by computing a series of shot records and
seismic
sections from three-dimensional finite-difference models involving a
point source, and then comparing them with similar data based on the correspondi
g two-dimensional models. The results obtained from three-dimensional models
provide not only additional information, such as sideswipes, but they are also
significantly different from the two-dimensional results. Among other things,
anomalously strong events that look like bright spots are identified as
originating from a single interface possessing a perfectly uniform reflectivity
and are caused by the focusing of the reflected energy in a three-dimensional
environment. Thus, lateral variations in amplitude that are commonly attributed
to changes in lithology are strongly influenced by the geometric changes in the
subsurface reflectors along the third, and commonly ignored, spatial dimension.
Such interpretation pitfalls can be avoided by a simultaneous analysis of data
along mutually ntersecting
seismic
lines.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91035©1988 AAPG-SEPM-SEG Pacific Sections and SPWLA Annual Convention, Santa Barbara, California, 17-19 April 1988.