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GCChronostratigaphic
Surfaces and
Seismic
Reflections*
By
Bob A. Hardage1, Randy L. Remington1, and Paul E. Murray1
Search and Discovery Article #40212 (2006)
Posted October 5, 2006
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the authors and entitled, “Reflections Have a ‘Tipper Point’,” in AAPG Explorer, September, 2006. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage. Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Bureau of Economic Geology, Austin, Texas ([email protected] )
General Statement
A fundamental premise of
seismic
stratigraphy is that
seismic
reflections follow chronostratigraphic surfaces, not lithostratigraphic
surfaces.
In 1993, Tipper published an intriguing paper
(Geological Magazine, v. 130, no. 1, p. 47-55) in which the following question
was posed: “Do
seismic
reflection
events necessarily follow chronostratigraphic
surfaces?” Simple earth models and forward
seismic
modeling were used to
illustrate basic and important interpretation principles.
The
editor of this monthly column (Hardage) has observed increased interest in
seismic
interpretation among graduate students when they have been asked to
analyze this Tipper paper, so repeating some of its concepts here seems
appropriate.
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uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuModelsuConclusionuAcknowledgement
uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuModelsuConclusionuAcknowledgement
uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuModelsuConclusionuAcknowledgement
uGeneral statementuFigure captionsuModelsuConclusionuAcknowledgement |
Stratigraphic and
We use the stratigraphic model in
Figure 1 as a demonstration. This model
shows five units deposited at five different geologic times -- T1
through T5. These five chronostratigraphic bodies are shown in the top
panels of Figures 2,
3, and 4 as stacked, overlapping targets
that are to be imaged. This five-layer stack is then illuminated with
In these figures, the left column shows the illumination created by a high-resolution wavelet; the center column uses a moderate-resolution wavelet for the imaging; and the right column documents the image produced by a low-resolution wavelet. The illuminating wavelet is shown beside each five-layer model for easy comparison of wavelet length with bed thicknesses and bed spacings. Modeling calculations are done in a dimensionless way in which all aspects of the model (bed thickness, bed spacing, bed overlap) are defined in terms of the dominant wavelength of the illuminating wavelet. This approach allows one person to think of the analysis as “the wavelet is the same in all cases, but the stratigraphic units have different thicknesses and spacings,” while another person can view the picture as “the unit thicknesses and spacings are always the same, but the wavelet varies.” Either view is correct. Use the one that is less taxing to the brain. Relationships between wavelet length, bed thickness, and bed spacing are defined at the top of each column. The amount of unit-to-unit overlap decreases as modeling proceeds from Figures 2, 3, and 4. What does this modeling exercise tell us? With l to represent the dominant wavelength of the illuminating wavelet, some key points are:
In this case, the
Even though the imaging is not 100 percent
correct, there is a Conclusion
Whether
Probably all
However, in critical prospect areas, modeling
similar to what is illustrated here should be done to determine whether
the assumption that
Tipper,
John C., 1993, Do
Documenting principles of elastic-wavefield |
