--> ABSTRACT: 3-D Seismic Expression of High-Frequency Sequence Stratigraphy in Vermilion Block 50-Tiger Shoal Area, Offshore Louisiana, by Hongliu Zeng, Tucker F. Hentz, and Lesli J. Wood; #90906(2001)
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Hongliu Zeng1, Tucker F. Hentz1, Lesli J. Wood1

(1) The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX

ABSTRACT: 3-D Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Expression of High-Frequency Previous HitSequenceNext Hit Stratigraphy in Vermilion Block 50-Tiger Shoal Area, Offshore Louisiana

Extracting high-resolution information from limited bandwidth Previous HitseismicNext Hit data is a major challenge when using Previous HitseismicNext Hit to extend well-based high-frequency Previous HitsequenceNext Hit stratigraphy to a 3-D area. Critical to such extension is the recognition and interpretation of a geobody's plano-form. Emphasis should be shifted from interpreting vertical Previous HitseismicNext Hit data to developing new tools capable of extracting more horizontal, Previous HitseismicNext Hit sedimentologic information. This case study shows that proportionally, stratal slicing between flooding surfaces provides sequential and accurate Previous HitseismicNext Hit imagery of depositional systems, which in turn serves as a basis for recognizing and mapping high-frequency (fourth-order) systems tracts, Previous HitsequenceNext Hit Previous HitboundariesNext Hit, and sequences in geologic time domain. This example illustrates why stratal slices are generally better than time slices and horizon slices in interpreting depositional morphology. In a 1-s-traveltime interval, most of the 31 fourth-order sequences from wells in the study can be seismically mapped at a resolution equivalent to 10 m in depth. An easy-to-follow procedure to visualize a fourth-order Previous HitsequenceNext Hit by using stratal slices includes five steps: (1) recognize depositional systems, (2) separate mapping units by viewing depositional history, (3) digitize systems tracts, (4) visualize systems tracts and Previous HitsequenceNext Hit Previous HitboundariesNext Hit in geologic time, and (5) visualize systems tracts and Previous HitsequenceNext Hit Previous HitboundariesTop in depth (traveltime).

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90906©2001 AAPG Annual Convention, Denver, Colorado