--> ABSTRACT: 3D Seismic Coherence Mapping: A Technological Breakthrough, by John A. Lopez, Mike Bahorich, Norm Haskell, and Susan Nissen; #91019 (1996)
[First Hit]

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

3D Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Coherence Mapping: A Technological Breakthrough

John A. Lopez, Mike Bahorich, Norm Haskell, and Susan Nissen

Amoco has developed a new coherence algorithm which, when applied to 3-D Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit, provides a new and sensitive Previous HitseismicNext Hit attribute for enhancing the imaging of geologic features. Map view images of the coherence attribute readily depict faults of all magnitudes, diapirs, and other lateral discontinuities with a level of detail greater than traditional Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit. The technique can also delineate subtle stratigraphic features. For reconnaissance, the coherence algorithm can be applied in a time-constant window without any prior interpretation. For example, coherence slices of a 360 square mile speculative Previous HitseismicNext Hit survey from the South Marsh Island area in the Gulf of Mexico dramatically depict the regional fault pattern over the entire survey area, as well as detailed channel morphologies. A second example from the Ship Shoal area demonstrates the complex structural evolution above a salt canopy near the Mahogany sub-salt discovery. Such map-view coherence slices are far superior to typical Previous HitseismicNext Hit amplitude time slice; however, vertical coherence sections are not superior to traditional vertical Previous HitseismicNext Hit amplitude sections. This suggests that the ideal horizontal Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes are different from the ideal vertical Previous HitseismicNext Hit attributes. Significant interpretational advantage is realized when the ideal pair of attributes is combined in a single 3-dimensional Previous HitdisplayNext Hit, such as a chair diagram. The use of this type of Previous HitdisplayNext Hit on an interpretive workstation allows one to see ahead and to interpret ahead while scrolling through the Previous HitseismicTop volume. With th use of the ideal horizontal and vertical attributes, interpretations are faster and more accurate.

AAPG Search and Discover Article #91019©1996 AAPG Convention and Exhibition 19-22 May 1996, San Diego, California