Superior Seismic Imaging in the Gulf of Suez - Aspects of VSP Design, Acquisition and Processing
By
Dana Jurick1, Avi Ghosh1, Z Patval2, H Merry3, L Walter3
(1) Ocean Energy, Houston, TX (2) Baker Atlas Geoscience, Houston, TX (3) Geospace Engineering Resources, Houston,
Seismic imaging in the Gulf of Suez is well known to suffer from
multiple-generating shale and anhydrite sequences and also complex salt
geometries which can severely contaminate the seismic reflection signal. Recent
experience from East Zeit well A-21 in the southern Gulf of Suez suggests that
careful VSP modelling, acquisition with new multi-receiver arrays and subsequent
processing with an emphasis on
noise
rejection is capable, in some cases, of
delivering higher quality seismic images than previously observed, not only in
VSP’s but also compared to surface seismic.
Modelling was performed to establish viable illumination geometries for zero-offset and multi-level walkaway VSPs acquired over this highly deviated well. The profiles were designed to image dipping reservoir units of Cretaceous age, important bounding faults and to improve confidence in ties to the existing depth-migrated 3D surface seismic. A twenty-four level 3-component geophone array was deployed with a standard airgun source.
While results from the zero-offset survey quickly produced a high quality
image, the walkaway data presented significant
noise
challenges.
Dip
-based
noise
rejection was ultimately successful in enhancing the signal to
noise
ratio such
that the reservoir and a critical bounding fault could be confidently identified
and tied. These results demonstrate that primary seismic reflection energy may
be effectively recovered from the target section in this area, despite
significant
noise
, through careful planning, acquisition and processing.