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7th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition
Manama, Bahrain
March 27-29, 2006
Seismic
Surveys
1 TEEC, Burgwedelerstr. 89, Isernhagen HB, 30916, Germany, phone: +49 511 7240452, fax: +49 511 7240465,
[email protected]
2 TEEC, Burgwedeler Str. 89, Isernhagen, D-30916, Germany
3 Geophysical Technology, Anadarko International New Ventures, 1 Harefield Road, Uxbridge, UB8 1YH, United Kingdom
4 Maersk Olie og Gas AS, Denmark
5 Anadarko Algeria Company LLC, United Kingdom
Seismic
aquisition in frontier areas represents a high risk when dealing with remote areas with difficult access, limited
operation times due to seasonal influences and governmental restrictions, and a large uncertainty in the design of optimum
aquisition parameters. Under such circumstances, high-fold 3D
seismic
surveying is not feasable, but 2D surveying may
also not be appropriate to describe the areal extent of potential targets.
Sparse 3D surveys are frequently used as a compromise. A
land
data
example from North Africa is presented here where
large bin sizes (50x50m), and low
data
fold kept the aquisition costs below given limits.
Seismic
investigations focussed on
flat target horizons, and low-throw faulting in the target regions. As expected, the results of standard time processing could
not compete with results from nearby high-fold surveys. A much lower signal-to-noise ratio provided a very restricted
resolution of the subsurface.
As an alternative, a CRS time processing was applied to these
data
. This method is well suited to tackle noise problems in
low-fold
data
, since it uses a much higher stacking fold than conventional time domain imaging. CRS obtains the high fold
by assuming subsurface reflector elements with dip and curvature.
CRS imaging of the sparse 3D
data
provided a strong increase in subsurface resolution, and signal-to-noise ratio. It also
resolved the faulting which was almost completely buried in noise in conventional images. The combination of sparse 3D
aquisition with CRS processing thus proved to be a suitable strategy for achieving good subsurface resolution with a limited
acquisition
effort.