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GCDepth Registration of P-Wave and S-Wave Images*
By
Bob A. Hardage and I.J. Aluka
Search and Discovery Article #40186
Posted February 7, 2006
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the authors and entitled, “Depth Registration Has Pitfalls,” in AAPG Explorer, February, 2006. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage. Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Senior research scientist, Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas ([email protected] )
2Professor of physical science, Prairie View A&M University, Prairie View, Texas
Introduction
Hardage and Aluka
(2006) introduced the concept of
elastic
wavefield seismic stratigraphy, a
seismic interpretation technology that expands traditional P-wave seismic
stratigraphy into the emerging world of multicomponent seismic technology.
Two assumptions are involved
in
elastic
wavefield seismic stratigraphy:
-
Across some stratigraphic intervals, one mode of an
elastic
wavefield will exhibit different seismic
sequences and/or seismic facies than will its companion wave modes. -
S-wave seismic sequences and facies are just as important in geologic interpretation as are traditional P-wave seismic sequences and facies.
Once these two assumptions
are accepted, a serious interpretational challenge is immediately encountered:
Depth registration of P and S images. An interpreter must be confident a
targeted data window in P-wave image space is depth equivalent to a data window
selected from S-wave image space before the seismic sequences and facies in
these respective windows can be used in an
elastic
wavefield seismic
stratigraphy analysis. Until depth-equivalent P and S data windows are defined,
no meaningful geological interpretation of P and S seismic sequences or facies
can be done.
Techniques seismic stratigraphers use to define depth-equivalent coordinates in P-wave and S-wave image spaces include:
-
P-wave and S-wave synthetic seismograms.
-
Multicomponent VSP data.
-
Map and section views of P and S images of structure and stratigraphy.
Only the latter two options are discussed here.
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uIntroductionuFigure captionsuMulticomponent VSP datauMap & section viewsuAcknowledgmentuReference
uIntroductionuFigure captionsuMulticomponent VSP datauMap & section viewsuAcknowledgmentuReference
uIntroductionuFigure captionsuMulticomponent VSP datauMap & section viewsuAcknowledgmentuReference
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Multicomponent VSP DataMulticomponent vertical seismic profile (VSP) data allow rigorous and accurate depth registration of P and S images -- if the VSP data are acquired with receiver stations distributed over a large vertical interval. The depth origin of a seismic reflection can be determined precisely only if closely spaced receivers span the interface that produces that reflection. The longer the vertical array of receiver stations used in VSP data acquisition, the larger the number of reflecting interfaces spanned and the more depth-equivalent P and S reflections identified. Examples of nine-component (9-C) VSP data used to define depth origins of P, SH, and SV reflections across an interval of Morrow channel deposition are shown in Figure 1. These data are examples of depth-based VSP imaging.
The three VSP wells shown in
Figure 1 are in
three different states: Texas, Kansas, and Colorado. The images show
that at each well, each Map Views and Section Views of P and S StratigraphyAn example of horizontal time slices through P and S coherency volumes used to define depth-equivalent stratigraphy is illustrated as panels (a) and (b) of Figure 2. The P-P image shows a system of several intertwined channels. The P-SV image shows only one channel, but that channel tracks one of the P-P channels, leading to the conclusion that the P-P and P-SV data are imaging the same stratigraphy. The channel architecture shown on these two images persists for a narrow vertical range of only two to three time samples in each image space.
Two important conclusions can be made:
This latter conclusion is a fundamental
premise of Shown in panels (c) and (d) of Figure 2 are vertical slices through these P and S data volumes along highlighted profile 2100. The horizontal yellow line across each vertical slice shows where the horizontal slice from the corresponding data volume was taken. Using only vertical displays of P-P and P-SV data, an interpreter would have to have great courage to claim the two yellow lines are depth equivalent. In contrast, few interpreters seem to object to the statement that the two map views in panels (a) and (b) are depth equivalent.
These examples lead us to the conclusion that
map views of thin stratigraphy can be a rather precise option for depth
registering two
Reference
Hardage, Bob A., and I.J. Aluka, 2006, |
