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GCWhy We Need Color for Seismic Display*
By
Alistair Brown1
Search and Discovery Article #40069 (2003)
*Adapted for online presentation from the Geophysical Corner column in AAPG Explorer, January, 2001, entitled “Color Reveals Seismic Message,” and prepared by the author. Appreciation is expressed to the author, to R. Randy Ray, Chairman of the AAPG Geophysical Integration Committee, and to Larry Nation, AAPG Communications Director, for their support of this online version.
1Consulting reservoir geophysicist, Dallas, TX
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uBackground and need for color
uBackground and need for color
uBackground and need for color
uBackground and need for color
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Everybody must have noticed that seismic data is more colorful than it used to be. This is not just to make the data pretty, nor because today color is cheap; it is to convey information. Huge amounts of geology can be interpreted from seismic data today -- especially reasonable quality 3-D -- and color, used properly, is an essential tool. Wiggle traces started in the field on paper records. The playback center of the 1950s added the variable area display to help the interpreter follow structure. But for interpretation of stratigraphy, hydrocarbons, porosity, and reservoir properties we need something better. Variable-intensity color is needed rather than variable-area wiggle (Figure 1) for four reasons:
All logic and intuition in color usage comes from the color cube, and good color schemes are based closely on it. Contrasting color schemes are used for maps; gradational color schemes for data.
A double-gradational color scheme, such as
seen in
Figure 1, enhances high
A single-gradational color scheme, on the
other hand, enhances low
The most common double-gradational color
scheme and the most universal color scheme overall is the well-known
blue-white-red (Figure
1). The normal and conventional use
of this has blue for positive This is the best data color scheme for the novice user. Pure primary blue and pure primary red is normally best. Natural pairing of adjacent reflections is a powerful interpretive observation that aids reflection identification and reservoir understanding. It is made possible only by the use of double-gradational color.
Look again at
Figure 1, and note how the upper
high
Special enhanced dynamic range color schemes
permit even better definition of stratigraphic detail. A good example of
this is the color scheme cyan-blue-white-red-yellow illustrated in
Figure 2, which provides even more visual dynamic range than
blue-white-red. Here, cyan and yellow highlight the maximum amplitudes.
Figure 2 shows a reservoir offshore
Nigeria in which gas is over oil, which, in turn, is over water. You can
easily see that the gas-oil contact is higher
An interpreter with a detailed objective will
be looking for Color is also valuable for other types of display. Structure maps should use a contrasting color scheme. Horizon slices and most attribute maps, on the other hand, require a gradational color scheme -- again, this helps the interpreter recognize important trends and patterns. Remember:
Please use color and select your color scheme with care. |


