--> ABSTRACT: Advances in Interbed Multiples Prediction and Attenuation: Case Study from Onshore Kuwait, by Al-Deen, Khalid M. Shams; El-Emam, Adel, Zahran, Wael A.; #90141 (2012)
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Advances in Interbed Previous HitMultiplesNext Hit Prediction and Attenuation: Case Study from Onshore Kuwait

Al-Deen, Khalid M. Shams 1; El-Emam, Adel1, Zahran, Wael A.1
(1) Exploration, Kuwait Oil Company, Ahmadi, Kuwait.

Previous HitMultiplesNext Hit contamination both surface and interbed related is a problem in almost all Middle East basins. The high acoustic impedance of carbonates and anhydrites layered with clastics is the major generator of these interbed Previous HitmultiplesNext Hit. These types of Previous HitmultiplesNext Hit are known to hinder the interpretation, fracture characterization, and inversion studies; they significantly complicate both the structural and stratigraphic interpretation within the zone of interest at the Cretaceous level as well as at the frontier Jurassic and Permian sections.

Previous work has demonstrated marginal success in attenuating the main interbed Previous HitmultiplesNext Hit using the 1D multiple Previous HitmodelingNext Hit technique post-migration thorough the analysis and identification of the major multiple generators using well.

This paper presents a case study describing the application of several data-driven multiple attenuation techniques using more advanced true-azimuth algorithms prior to pre-stack migration. The algorithms applied in this study are general surface multiple prediction, extended interbed multiple prediction and deterministic interbed demultiple. Multiple Previous HitmodelingNext Hit and subtraction were performed on a high-resolution full-azimuth dataset acquired in northwest Raudhatain oil field, onshore Kuwait.

This case study demonstrates the use of the latest industry multiple attenuation techniques that utilize 3D true-azimuth data-driven algorithms with no need for regularization or interpolation and produce superior results. In addition, all multiple attenuation algorithms are applied pre-stack and pre-migration; consequently, the subsequent velocity model building, subsurface imaging, and pre-stack inversion are deemed to be more robust in the absence of the Previous HitmultiplesNext Hit.

The results have been verified through various QC tools including well ties and seismic inversion; it is clearly shown that those Previous HitmultiplesTop have not only been successfully attenuated in the reservoir level, but also in the overburden.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90141©2012, GEO-2012, 10th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition, 4-7 March 2012, Manama, Bahrain