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GCRandomness in 3-D Seismic Survey Design*
By
Engin Alkan1 and Bob Hardage2
Search and Discovery Article #40265 (2007)
Posted November 20, 2007
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the authors, in AAPG Explorer, October, 2007, and entitled “Was That Survey Crew Sober?”. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage. Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Graduate student at the Jackson School of Geosciences.
2Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected])
General Statement
Considerable effort can be expended in onshore 3-D seismic data acquisition in surveying the coordinates where source-station and receiver-station flags are placed, because these flags will later instruct field personnel exactly where to plant geophones and vibrator drivers exactly where to position their vehicles. Sometimes there is a long delay (perhaps weeks or months) between the deployment of these station flags and the arrival of the seismic crew. In such instances, a station-surveying crew may visit the prospect a second time and invest additional time and expense to reset station flags that have disappeared for any reason.
The justification for this emphasis on precise, pre-survey station-flag positioning is partly tradition that holds over from days when GPS technology was not available and there was no other way to define the X, Y and Z coordinates of each source and receiver station. But the justification also is partly based on seismic data-processing requirements. Numerous data-processing algorithms require seismic data to be sampled at regularly spaced intervals in X, Y space. To ensure correct data processing, some explorationists exert a serious effort to positioning source-station and receiver-station flags at precise, regularly spaced intervals before any data-acquisition activity is initiated.
uFigure captionsuStation flag positioninguExamples
uFigure captionsuStation flag positioninguExamples
uFigure captionsuStation flag positioninguExamples
uFigure captionsuStation flag positioninguExamples
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Station Flag PositioningAn issue to consider is, “Is it necessary to position station flags accurately before a seismic survey begins, or is it only necessary to know station coordinates accurately after they have been occupied?” Almost every vehicle and every person on a modern seismic crew has a GPS system, and their positions are known at all times. The GPS systems in vibrator trucks define precisely where the source is positioned; GPS units carried by the geophone-deployment crew define precisely where they planted the geophones.
Regarding the issue of regularity of data
sampling, powerful algorithms exist to convert irregularly
sampled data to regularly sampled data. Thus, if post-survey station
coordinates are know with high accuracy, there is less need to expend
cost in pre-survey
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