--> Multicomponent Seismic Augments Seismic Stratigraphy Interpretation, by Bob Hardage, #40888 (2012).
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GCMulticomponent Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Augments Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Stratigraphy Interpretation*

 

Bob HardagePrevious Hit1Next Hit

 

Search and Discovery Article #40888 (2012)

Posted February 20, 2012

 

*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the authors, in AAPG Explorer, February, 2012, and entitled “Multicomponent Previous HitSeismicNext Hit Proves Its Value”. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Satinder Chopra ([email protected]). Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.

 

Previous Hit1Next Hit Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected])

 

General Statement

A fundamental thesis of elastic wavefield Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphy (or multicomponent Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphy) is that S-wave Previous HitseismicNext Hit data have equal value to P-wave data for geological interpretation. Previous HitSeismicNext Hit stratigraphy analyses, then, should be based on interpreting P and S data in combination (the full elastic wavefield) rather than restricting interpretation to only single-component P-wave data (traditional Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphy).

An example illustrating differences between P-wave and S-wave definitions of reflecting interfaces and the rock physics principles that cause this behavior are discussed here. The particular S-wave mode used in this example is the converted-shear (PSV) mode.

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Figure Captions

Figure Previous Hit1Next Hit. P-P and P-SV images centered on the Wolfcamp (arrows). P-P data exhibit a low-amplitude Previous HitseismicNext Hit facies that is difficult to interpret; P-SV data produce a high-amplitude Previous HitseismicNext Hit facies. Data provided by Fasken Oil and Ranch.

Figure 2. Log data across the Wolfcamp interval (9,714 to 10,902 feet KB). The velocity curve on the left of the center panel is shear velocity, VS. The curve on the right is compressional velocity VP. Wolfcamp reflectivity was evaluated at the interface drawn at approximately 10,300 feet (3,149 meters).

Figure 3. P-P and P-SV reflectivities at the Wolfcamp interface, at approximately 10,300 feet (3,140 meters).

Example

Marked contrasts between compressional-wave (P-P) and P-SV Previous HitseismicNext Hit sequences and Previous HitseismicNext Hit facies occur across numerous stratigraphic intervals. The example chosen for this discussion is from west Texas (Figure Previous Hit1Next Hit). The arrows on the P-P and P-SV images of this figure identify a significant difference between P-P and P-SV reflectivities for a targeted reservoir interval – the Wolfcamp Formation.

Well log data across the Wolfcamp interval local to this Previous HitseismicNext Hit profile are displayed on Figure 2. P-P and P-SV reflectivity behaviors are analyzed across the Wolfcamp interface, shown at a depth of approximately 10,300 feet, to demonstrate the geological reason for the difference in P-P and P-SV reflection amplitude strengths exhibited on Figure Previous Hit1Next Hit.

Compressional-wave and shear-wave velocities and formation bulk density values were averaged across 300-foot intervals immediately above and below this internal Wolfcamp interface, and these average rock properties were used to calculate the reflectivity curves shown as Figure 3. These curves confirm that for this particular interface, P-SV reflectivity is greater than P-P reflectivity when both reflectivity curves are evaluated over a large range of incidence angles.

For example, P-P reflectivity exceeds 0.04 only for incidence angles between 0 and 15 degrees, but P-SV reflectivity has a magnitude greater than 0.04 for incidence angles between 15 degrees and 45 degrees – an angle range that is twice as large as that of the high-amplitude P-P response.

Because the multicomponent Previous HitseismicNext Hit data across this study area were acquired with a full range of incidence angles, the difference in P-P and P-SV amplitude behavior shown on Figure Previous Hit1Next Hit has a valid rock-physics basis. P-P amplitudes should be weaker than P-SV amplitudes, and the data exhibit that behavior.

Conclusion

The principle documented by this example is that an elastic wavefield Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphy interpretation based on both P-P and P-SV data can provide a different – and often a more valid – geological model of Previous HitseismicNext Hit sequence boundaries and Previous HitseismicNext Hit facies than can a single-mode Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphy interpretation based on P-P data only. Future applications of Previous HitseismicNext Hit stratigraphy probably will rely more and more on full-elastic wavefield Previous HitseismicNext Hit data than on only single-component Previous HitseismicTop data.

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