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GCUnderstanding Seismic Amplitudes*
By
Steve Henry1
Search and Discovery Article #40135 (2004)
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner columns in AAPG Explorer, July and August, 2004, entitled, respectively, “Understanding Seismic Amplitudes” and “More Amplitude Understanding” and prepared by the author. Appreciation is expressed to the author, to Alistar R. Brown, editor of Geophysical Corner, and to Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1GeoLearn, Houston, Texas ([email protected])
Seismic interpretation is fundamentally based on interpreting changes in amplitude. The changing amplitude values that define the seismic trace are typically explained using the convolutional model. This model states that trace amplitudes have three controlling factors:
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The seismic wavelet.
-
The wavelet's interactions through convolution.
Large impedance
(velocity x density) contrasts at geologic boundaries will generally have higher
amplitudes on the seismic trace. Interpreters associate changes in seismic
amplitudes with changes in the
geology
; this is a good assumption only if all of
the factors that affect trace amplitudes have been considered.
This article is
intended to provide the interpreter with a checklist of the factors that should
be considered when associating amplitude changes on the seismic trace with
changes in
geology
. First, it presents the major effects that interpreters need
to understand about seismic acquisition, where the wavelet is generated and the
field trace recorded, and the interaction of the wavelet with the
geology
. Of
21-listed factors that affect seismic amplitudes through seismic acquisition and
the earth, five are most important. One of the primary goals of seismic
processing is to compensate for curved ray spherical divergence, which is one of
the five factors. The other four factors before processing remain in the seismic
data, as they are not normally corrected in seismic processing.
Second, this
article discusses the factors affecting amplitudes in seismic processing and
interpreter controls on the
workstation
(loading, processing, and display). When
all these factors have been considered, then the changes in amplitudes can be
more reliably related to changes in
geology
.
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uFactors in processing & interpretation
uFactors in processing & interpretation
uFactors in processing & interpretation
uFactors in processing & interpretation
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Factors Affecting Amplitude Before Seismic Processing Factors that affect amplitudes, before seismic processing, are illustrated in Figures 1 and 2. A checklist of 21 factors, along with brief comments describing the factors and an estimated magnitude of the effect, comprises Table 1 The magnitude of most of these can only be estimated, and removing their effects to obtain absolutely true amplitudes is impossible. Fortunately, relative changes in amplitude have been shown to be adequate and have been successfully applied for reducing risk, such as direct hydrocarbon indicators, estimating lithofacies, etc. Although only the moderate and major effects are discussed here, it is important to keep in mind how the amplitudes are being used in the interpretation. If a well is being proposed based solely on an amplitude anomaly, even a minor to moderate effect would need to be examined, as it could have a significant impact. The five factors that have a big effect on amplitudes during the acquisition of field data are shown in black lettering in Figures 1 and 2. The most important of these factors is the loss of energy due to curved-ray spherical divergence (F6). This effect on amplitudes is often approximated by the inverse square of distance, which for constant velocity is the inverse square of time. This factor is smaller for reflectors that are separated by less time, and minor for most lateral changes. For the real, non-constant velocity earth, this effect is greater (1/v2t) but still inadequate for recovering true amplitudes of deep reflectors.
Laterally
discontinuous (F5) high impedance geologic features can greatly
reduce the amount of energy transmitted to the underlying Tuning (F7) occurs when the separation between RC creates constructive or destructive interference of the wavelet's center and side lobes. This interference can increase or decrease amplitudes and is most evident in areas of geologic thinning such as angular unconformities or stratigraphic pinch-outs. The magnitude of this effect can be major, but normally it does not exceed a factor of 1.5 as determined by the size of the side lobes. Amplitude variations with angle (AVA or AVO) relate relative amplitude changes (F8) in pre-stacked data to combined rock and pore-space fluid properties. This effect can be large for some gas effects. The appearance of this offset-dependent variation will be much less apparent on the stacked trace that contains the summation of all offsets. Overall on the final stack, AVA effects are in the range of a factor of 2-5 compared to no AVA. The placement of sources and receivers on the surface of the earth is not always uniform, resulting in missing ground positions (F21) that can have a moderate to major effect on amplitudes. Often, buildings, platforms, lakes, rivers, etc., must be avoided; stations are skipped; and traces will be missing from the stacking bin. This reduces the ability of stack to reduce random noise -- but the greater effect is a frequency unbalancing.
Factors Affecting Amplitudes Arising in Processing and Interpretation
In addition to the 21 factors that could affect seismic amplitudes
through seismic acquisition and the earth, 14 other additional factors,
listed here (Table 2), arise in seismic
processing and interpretation. Again, only the major factors are
discussed; unfortunately, any of the factors could be important in
interpreting amplitude changes as changes in It is good practice for interpreters to inform seismic processors (good processors appreciate this) how they will use the data in interpretation (i.e., structural, stratigraphic, AVA, etc.). Processors will appreciate your insights because they will be using tens of processing programs containing hundreds of parameters. Many of the programs and parameters alter seismic amplitudes. Table 2 summarizes the most important of these amplitude-altering processing steps. You can use this table in amplitude discussions with your processor.
In order
to assist in the understanding of Figure 4 shows the wavelets from the top of these thick sands as seen through successive stages of seismic processing. Reading from left to right, first observe the zero-offset, raw field trace before processing. Then notice the changes in the seismic amplitudes due to an idealized processing sequence of:
After-migration amplitude values (shown in red) should ideally be identical for all the top sand reflectors. The only amplitudes that are identical are the two from the flat sand 1. The deeper flat sand visible on Trace 1 should have the same amplitude value as the shallower reflector; unfortunately, spherical-divergence correction programs (F23) typically under-correct deep amplitudes. This correction only accounted for one of the many amplitude-altering factors encountered by the wavelet during its round-trip between the surface and the top of sand 2. The observed amplitude at sand 2 also is a function of the phase and frequency content of the wavelet (F24), which is different from sand 1 due to attenuation and maybe assumptions in deconvolution. On the migrated version of Trace 2 we view the dipping-reflector from sand 3 at the same time as sand 2 on Trace 1. The dipping sand has lower amplitude than the flat sand, due to NMO (F26) combined with stack (F29).
In our
simple model, we assume that a flat-reflector value was used for the NMO
correction. Thus, NMO is correct only for flat reflectors so that the
stack process attenuates the amplitude of dipping reflectors, due to
uncorrected dip contamination of the NMO velocities. In addition,
dipping reflectors are displaced from their apparent location on the
stacked section. Thus, they must be migrated (F32) to their
proper subsurface positions. As shown in Figure
3, the amplitude that will be displayed on the
The
journey of these amplitudes is not yet completed, as we must load the
data onto the With the seismic data now loaded, interpreters have many opportunities to alter amplitudes further (F35). For example, 2-D line balancing programs change gains, timing, frequency, and phase. In addition, user-applied settings for filtering, phase rotation, and even the selection of color bars change how amplitudes are perceived.
Amplitudes are the basic input to seismic attribute analysis calculations. Factors have been described that affect seismic amplitudes through seismic acquisition, the earth, seismic processing, and seismic interpretation. Seismic interpretation contains most of the major amplitude factors (Table 2), and the interpreter controls these based on knowledge (F36). By not understanding the factors that affect amplitudes, drilling decisions can be in error.
On the
other hand, relative amplitudes provided to interpreters are, with care,
being successfully used for reducing risk and discovering hydrocarbons.
You can improve your amplitude-based interpretations by considering the
factors described. Your interpretation is on the firmest foundation by
comparing amplitudes that are at approximately the same two-way time and
have similar overlying geologic sections. Relating amplitudes to
Sheriff, R. E., 1975, Factors affecting seismic amplitudes: Geophysical Prospecting, v. 23, p. 125-138.
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