Tomography for Near-Surface and
Imaging Velocity
Determination -- Examples from the Western Desert in Egypt
By
John Bedingfield1, August Lau1, Chris Koeninger2, Nabil El Kady2, Maurice Nessim2
(1) Apache Egypt Company, Maadi, Egypt (2) WesternGeco, Cairo, Egypt
The accurate determination of the velocity
distribution in the subsurface is
probably the single most important part in the long sequence of processing
steps. In land surveys velocities impact the noise patterns, the amplitude
behaviour, the static and dynamic distortions. In general processing attempts to
correct for these effects with velocities that are individually tuned.
Noise attenuation and amplitude correction velocities are spatially smooth or
even constant. Near-Surface velocities for static corrections require much more
detail if their effects on the timing of structures are to be reliably resolved.
The velocity
model that is used for depth imaging generally undergoes various
iterations and is the most difficult yet also the most important part of the
velocity
puzzle.
This paper will concentrate mainly on the near-surface and depth imaging
velocity
models and the tomographic approach to derive them. For the
near-surface model first-arrival times are raytraced and inverted for slowness
updates in a cell-based model. Similarly for the depth imaging case a cell-based
model is used to compute slowness updates derived from user-supplied
velocity
information. This
velocity
information is much easier to obtain and more readily
available in routine processing than reflection time picks from prestack data
which requires good data quality and is very time consuming.
Examples of the techniques are shown on data from the Western Desert in Egypt with a discussion of specific issues that were encountered during processing.