--> ABSTRACT: Suppression of the Acquisition Footprint for Seismic Sequence Attribute Mapping, by Kurt J. Marfurt, Ron M. Sheet, John A. Sharp, Jim C. Ward, Gordon J. Cain, and Mark G. Harper; #91019 (1996)
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Suppression of the Previous HitAcquisitionNext Hit Footprint for Seismic Sequence Attribute Mapping

Kurt J. Marfurt, Ron M. Sheet, John A. Sharp, Jim C. Ward, Gordon J. Cain, and Mark G. Harper

Seismic coherency has proven to be very effective in delineating geologic faults as well as considerably more subtle stratigraphic features including channels, canyons, slumps, levees, dewatering patterns and pinnacle reefs. Unfortunately, seismic coherency estimates, which quantitatively measure the similarity or dissimilarity of adjacent traces in 3-D, is particularly sensitive to coherent noise that passes through the stack array. They are equally sensitive to dissimilarities in fold, offset distribution and azimuth distribution introduced through the 3-D binning process. We define both these effects to be the Previous HitacquisitionNext Hit footprint. This Previous HitacquisitionNext Hit footprint is usually unattenuated and often accentuated by aliased dip moveout and post stack migration operators.

While one may easily eliminate the Previous HitacquisitionNext Hit footprint on the seismic coherency time or depth slices using conventional spectral analysis, such filtering is inappropriate for solid angle dip maps, as well as for conventional phase, envelope, frequency and bandwidth maps where we need to preserve the DC bias. We show that simple 3-D true amplitude dip filtering of the (t,x,y) seismic data volume can be most effective in minimizing the detrimental effect of the Previous HitacquisitionNext Hit footprint on 3-D seismic attributes for both conventional marine and Previous HitlandNext Hit data Previous HitacquisitionTop geometries.

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