Image Enhancement Below the pre-Khuff Unconformity Using Pre and Post-Stack Multiple Attenuation
By
Michael A. Zinger1, Khalid I. Hassan1, Richard G. Jerskey1
(1) Saudi Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
One of the primary processing challenges within Saudi Arabia is the
attenuation of multiples. One source of multiples is the pegleg multiples
generated between the Jilh and the Khuff formations. This paper discusses
several techniques used to minimize this
energy
, the effect on the final stack
and ultimately, the interpretation.
The attenuation of this
energy
is accomplished through several means: 1.) The
optimization of the velocity analysis by using demultipled input. 2.) CDP based
pre-stack demultiple algorithms. 3.) An inner trace mute. 4.) An
interpretation-driven post-stack demult.
No one process is adequate, but each provides incremental improvements in the
attenuation of multiples. Taken together, the first three provide an optimized
stack through data processing alone. The last step, a post-stack demult,
requires multi-discipline cooperation between processing and interpreting
explorationists. This step flattens the data on the Jilh horizon, making the
assumption that the pegleg multiples will be parallel to this event. A very
narrow, surgically applied FK reject filter is applied to the data below the
Khuff, with the intent of removing only flat-lying
energy
.
The interpretation of the pre-Khuff data becomes crucial
in the final process, as primary
energy
is also removed if it is parallel to the
Jilh. This process works best where there is a difference between the dip of the
primary
energy
and the multiple
energy
. Two examples are shown in this paper:
first, a dramatic subcrop beneath the pre-Khuff unconformity, and second, the
image of a deep pre-Cambrian graben that is barely visible on the non-demultipled
data.