--> Abstract: New Directions in Seismic Stratigraphy, by B. Hart; #90090 (2009).
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New Directions in Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Stratigraphy

Hart, Bruce 1
1 ConocoPhillips, Houston, TX.

Previous HitSeismicNext Hit stratigraphic concepts and methods were proposed in the mid 1970s and were later expanded to include well- and outcrop-based analyses (thereby giving rise to the science of sequence stratigraphy). Previous HitSeismicNext Hit stratigraphic analyses have traditionally focused on reflection geometries (terminations, facies, etc.), amplitudes and other criteria that might be used to reconstruct changes in sea level, tectonic movements and sediment supply, to make predictions about the distribution of lithologies away from existing well control, and to identify reservoir geometry and correlation styles. Well data (core, borehole logs) are commonly used to ground-truth lithologies at well locations, but in a qualitative manner. The advent of 3-D Previous HitseismicNext Hit data allowed stratigraphers to see plan-view images of depositional systems, greatly enhancing the interpretability of the seismically imaged strata. In parallel with advances in Previous HitseismicNext Hit and sequence stratigraphy, geophysicists developed a toolkit (inversion, Previous HitseismicNext Hit attribute studies, amplitude-variation-with-offset, spectral decomposition, etc.) that enables lithology and to be predicted away from well control. In practice, these types of geophysical analyses are commonly undertaken in parallel with or after conventional Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphic analyses. Stratigraphers either do not seek or are not granted access to the results of the quantitative predictions, even though these predictions can be very useful for understanding depositional systems. In this talk I will argue that integrating quantitative Previous HitseismicNext Hit analyses is desirable and necessary to advance the field of Previous HitseismicTop stratigraphy. Making this type of integration will require that sedimentary geologists improve their competencies in certain branches of physics and other fields, but similar challenges have been met previously.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90090©2009 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, Denver, Colorado, June 7-10, 2009