Recent Applications of Turning-Ray Tomography And Tomostatics
By
Xianhuai Zhu1
(1) PGS Geophysical, 10550 Richmond Ave., Houston, TX
Turning-ray tomography and tomostatics have been applied to areas with
rugged
topography
and strongly variant near-surface geology. I review the
methodology of turning-ray tomography and tomostatics, and show how the
near-surface velocities estimated
from
turning-ray tomography are used for
static correction, wave-equation datuming and prestack depth
migration
.
Questions frequently asked will be highlighted to show 1) when and where
tomostatics will work better than conventional refraction statics; 2)
limitations of tomostatics; and 3) key steps to run tomostatics. Quality
controls will be illustrated to ensure the robustness of turning-ray tomography
and tomostatics.
Turning-ray tomography and tomostatics enhance interpretation and are
applicable to areas where refraction statics often fail, such as thrust belts,
high-velocity basalt or carbonate outcrops, unconsolidated low-velocity sand
dunes, marine trenches and shallow gas cloud regions. Although it does not
always provide better-stacked images than those
from
refraction statics,
tomostatics are at least as good as refraction statics. Interpreters often find
the near-surface velocity profile very useful when they determine a drill site.
Synthetic and field data examples have shown that the resolution of estimating a near-surface velocity model is directly dependent upon the picked first arrivals. Picking the first arrivals via a virtual reality system significantly improves the consistency of input data for the subsequent velocity estimation.