--> Advanced Workflows Coupled with Quantitative Interpretation: Improving Prospect Structural Delineation
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Advanced Workflows Coupled with Quantitative Interpretation: Improving Prospect Structural Delineation

Abstract

Recent advances in software development have enabled seamless integration of prestack data with advanced attributes and high-end interpretation and visualization workflows. We describe a new approach that gives geophysicists and geologists more flexibility in checking the quality of prestack data and helping to create and investigate customized seismic Previous HitstacksNext Hit. This approach, coupled with advanced attributes, 3D interpretation and visualization functionalities, significantly improves the structural delineation of a prospect. We begin by decomposing the prestack data by Previous HitangleNext Hit and then applying specific seismic attributes to each Previous HitangleNext Hit stack to highlight the structure. For example, multitrace attributes like variance and Ant Tracking are applied to each Previous HitangleNext Hit stack. As a result, the comparison reveals that the near-Previous HitangleNext Hit stack is the most appropriate to highlight faults. Clear identification of faults allows interpreting the reservoir top and base. Again, the different-Previous HitangleNext Hit Previous HitstacksNext Hit show various qualities in terms of reflector continuity. In this case, the mid-Previous HitangleNext Hit stack appears to be the best to highlight the top and base of the reservoir. This novel approach combines two types of information—the faults defined from the near-Previous HitangleNext Hit stack, and the best seismic amplitude from the mid-Previous HitangleNext Hit stack—into a single hybrid seismic cube. With this cube, any reflector can be automatically picked from the mid-Previous HitangleNext Hit stack amplitude with the constraint to stop at the faults detected on the near-Previous HitangleTop stack. This yields impressive results while using automated tracking to strictly follow faulted corridors. This automated-tracking interpretation is performed without interpreting any single fault. Lastly, the resulting top- and base-faulted horizons are gridded and used to create a surface 3D probe where faults are visually removed, which gives a realistic 3D view of the prospect and its complex compartmentalization. This paper demonstrates that combining prestack seismic data with advanced multitrace attributes and visualization workflows significantly improves the structural delineation of a prospect.