--> Abstract: 3-D Seismic Discontinuity for Faults and Stratigraphic Features: The Coherence Cube, by M. B. Bahorich and S. L. Farmer; #90952 (1996).
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Abstract: Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Discontinuity for Faults and Stratigraphic Features: The Coherence Previous HitCubeNext Hit

Mike B. Bahorich, Steven L. Farmer

Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit are traditionally acquired and processed for the purpose of imaging Previous HitseismicNext Hit reflections. This paper describes a method of processing Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit for the purpose of imaging Previous HitseismicNext Hit discontinuities including faults and stratigraphic features (U.S. and foreign patents pending, Bahorich and Farmer). One application of this non-traditional process results in a Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit volume, or "Previous HitcubeNext Hit", of coherence coefficients, within which faults are revealed as numerically separated surfaces. This is the first known method of revealing fault surfaces within a Previous Hit3-DNext Hit volume for which no fault reflections have been recorded.

Previous Hit3-DNext Hit Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataNext Hit are generally binned into a regular grid. By using relatively simple mathematics to calculate localized waveform similarity in both the in-line and cross-line directions, estimates of 3-dimensional Previous HitseismicNext Hit coherence are obtained. Small regions of Previous HitseismicNext Hit traces cut by a fault surface generally have a different Previous HitseismicNext Hit character than corresponding regions of neighboring traces. This results in a sharp discontinuity in local trace-to-trace coherence. Calculating coherence for each grid point along a time slice results in lineaments of low coherence along faults. when this process is repeated for a series of time slices, these lineaments become fault surfaces.

Since coherence is calculated from non-interpreted Previous HitseismicNext Hit Previous HitdataTop, it can quickly provide the geoscientist with a non-biased view of regional faulting and stratigraphic features. Unlike time slices, faults are revealed equally well whether parallel or perpendicular to bedding. Coherence displays simultaneously image structural and stratigraphic features and can aid in recognizing the interrelationship between them.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90952©1996 AAPG Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Billings, Montana