--> ABSTRACT: Deep Water Gulf of Mexico Sea Floor Features Revealed Through 3D Seismic, by E. Scott, F. Peel, C. Taylor, W. Bryant, and D. Bean; #90906(2001)
[First Hit]

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

E. Scott1, F. Peel1, C. Taylor1, W. Bryant2, and D. Bean2

1BHP Petroleum, Houston, TX
2Texas A&M, College Station, TX

ABSTRACT: Deep Water Gulf of Mexico Sea Floor Features Revealed Through 3D Seismic

A variety of methods during the past few decades have been used to map the sea floor in the northern part of the Gulf of Mexico. Until recently, the highest Previous HitresolutionNext Hit data sets with the most extensive coverage have been surface-towed, multi-beam, side-scan-sonar (NOAA Seabeam) and long-range sonar (GLORIA). Maps from these data sets have approximately a 30 meter Previous HitresolutionNext Hit on the sea floor. However, in deep and ultra-deep water depths the Previous HitresolutionNext Hit is lower due to the greater travel time from source to receiver. Other data sources that have been used to generate sea floor maps of the Gulf of Mexico include gravity, magnetics, satellite sensors and 2D seismic surveys. While maps generated from gravity, magnetics and satellite data cover the whole of the northern Gulf of Mexico or over a larger area, they are of much lower Previous HitresolutionNext Hit than either the NOAA or GLORIA data. 2D seismic data provides a higher Previous HitresolutionNext Hit of the sea floor, but due to their nature of a lattice of separate lines, they lack the spatial Previous HitresolutionNext Hit to define subtle features on the sea floor.

As seismic acquisition and processing technology evolved, 3D seismic surveys became available. With the close spacing of data points, 3D surveys provide greater spatial Previous HitresolutionNext Hit to map the sea floor and illuminate subtle features. However, due to cost and technological limitations, the first surveys were restricted to site specific localities with small areal extents. With the increased spatial Previous HitresolutionTop these initial surveys provided a more detailed map of the sea floor but only represented a postage stamp look in a regional context of the northern Gulf of Mexico. With the recent advances in technology along with exploration for hydrocarbons advancing to deep and ultra–deep water, larger 3D seismic surveys have been acquired and are now available on a regional scale. With the availability of these regional surveys, sea floor features that were previously unrecognizable have now been identified.

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