--> ABSTRACT: Chasing the Faults within a Permian Carbonate Using Wide Azimuth Seismic Data — A Thailand Case Study, by Kong, Vincent W.; Lawlor, Mike ; Hinz, Curtis E.; #90142 (2012)
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Chasing the Faults within a Permian Carbonate Using Previous HitWideNext Hit Previous HitAzimuthNext Hit Seismic Data — A Thailand Case Study

Kong, Vincent W.*1; Lawlor, Mike 2; Hinz, Curtis E.1
(1) WesternGeco, Perth, WA, Australia.
(2) Salamander Energy Thailand, Bangkok, Thailand.

Land seismic data was acquired over a Permian carbonate field with a Previous HitwideNext Hit Previous HitazimuthNext Hit acquisition template, such that the recorded 3D seismic data is inherently source-to-detector Previous HitazimuthNext Hit rich. This geometry allows the data to be subdivided into Previous HitazimuthNext Hit sectors, so that stacks of different “illumination” directions can be generated. Subsurface faults and families of fractures are generally better characterized when illuminated normal to their dip, i.e. head on against the faults.

The fault and fracture family patterns from each of the sorted shot-to-receiver Previous HitazimuthNext Hit sets portray a slightly different illumination of the continuity and development of these faults as shown in time-slices.

The paper will describe the Previous HitazimuthNext Hit sorting process, followed by the methodology to sharpen the fault pattern within each dataset. The acquisition of seismic data in a Previous HitwideNext Hit-Previous HitazimuthTop configuration has shown that with appropriate processing, it is possible to illuminate subtle faulting and fractures quite distinctively within the targeted hard rock reservoir.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90142 © 2012 AAPG Annual Convention and Exhibition, April 22-25, 2012, Long Beach, California